Speaker | Time | Text |
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The operating system of the Saxe-Coburg-Gotha families, which is the oldest bloodline of European bloodlines in the world, in which all European bloodlines agree are their progenitors. | ||
Going back to their founder, Vlad the Impaler, Count Dracula is the recognized head of the entire dynasty. | ||
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His Royal Highness Prince Charles, who can trace his ancestry back to Romania's dark and distant past. | |
The genealogy shows that I'm descended from Vlad the Impaler, you see. | ||
So I do have a bit of a stake in the country. | ||
As it were. | ||
And so this house of the dragon that flies the dragon banner, the Dracul, rule the planet, just like Revelation tells us the dragon. | ||
And it's allied with the other dragon, Chycoms, and its goal is feudalism, but with a high-tech overlay. | ||
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We're developing Through technology, an ability for consumers to measure their own carbon footprint. | |
What does that mean? | ||
That's, where are they traveling? | ||
How are they traveling? | ||
What are they eating? | ||
What are they consuming on the platform? | ||
So, Individual Carbon Footprint Tracker. | ||
Stay tuned, we don't have it operational yet, but this is something that we're working on. | ||
Total biometric surveillance. | ||
If we want to stop this epidemic, we need not just to monitor people, we need to monitor what's happening under their skin. | ||
And if you go back to the Aztecs, or the ancient Chinese, or the ancient Europeans, or the ancient Africans, everybody behaved the same. | ||
You had cycles and you would get cycles of society building up, developing technology, agrarian systems, developing towns and cities, and then the cults take over, the high priests take over, and they always use environmental reasons for the reason that they have to dominate and demand human sacrifices. | ||
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So the Illuminati is basically just an extension of the mystery religion system. | |
The whole type of philosophy. | ||
Yes, it was a way of hoarding knowledge and power to a few special people. | ||
And how did they hoard the knowledge? | ||
Well, when I say knowledge, some of the knowledge is pseudo-knowledge, and some of the knowledge is actually scientific knowledge, which enabled, for instance, Christopher Columbus to be certain that he could sail to Um, sail across the Atlantic and hit land. | ||
He was associated with the Knights Templars, which is one of these secret societies associated with the Illuminati. | ||
So you've got different types of knowledge, but some of the knowledge is actually bogus. | ||
It's just claimed so that they can get people to join whatever mystery religion they're trying to offer. | ||
And the UN and others at the Club of Rome in the 1960s, early 1960s, said, we're going to bring back the superstition of the pagans. | ||
And we're going to teach people they're bad, and teach them they're evil, and teach them that they have to pay, and teach them that old people have to die and babies have to be killed because there's too many people. | ||
So that we have a barbarous civilization that's the opposite of the Renaissance and Christianity, but one that is kill and be killed. | ||
And we believe this is the natural system of survival of the fittest, social Darwinism, and so we're going to bring this back. | ||
And that's the real system we're transitioning to now we hear about a transition. | ||
So they decided to get rid of that and replace it with the old authoritarian model of barbarism that has the exact same Features, no matter what color you are or where your ancestors came from, humans act the same in these cycles over and over again. | ||
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The satanic rituals that they carry out, which are horrendous traditional rituals, blood sacrifices, requires a certain level of insanity and disassociative ability. | |
If you were a normal sane person and you had to participate in the higher level Illuminati rituals, you'd probably go crazy. | ||
It's absolutely essential that they maintain the bloodlines. | ||
These are religious sacraments to these people of power over you! | ||
And they don't like the fact you're straight and strong. | ||
They don't like the fact you're good. | ||
They don't like the fact you're hardworking. | ||
They don't like the fact you want justice. | ||
They want to hurt you. | ||
They want to dominate you to fill that empty spot in their heart. | ||
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The world has, for the most part, stopped asking for the current whereabouts. | |
It's Wednesday, June 19th, in the year of our Lord. | ||
And you're listening to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
I think it's time to blow this thing. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
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It's you live on this Juneteenth. | |
June 19th, 2024. | ||
It's Juneteenth now! | ||
Juneteenth. | ||
What is Juneteenth? | ||
What even is it? | ||
It was made a federal holiday, what, last year? | ||
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The year before, maybe? | |
Prior to that, it was a Texas holiday. | ||
I guess you could say I have a complicated past with Juneteenth. | ||
Because it used to be fun. | ||
Used to be just an excuse to have a party. | ||
Back before it was picked up as a racially divisive tool of the left. | ||
It was fun. | ||
It used to be fun. | ||
Juneteenth is the celebration, the anniversary of the news of emancipation arriving in Texas. | ||
And this was, um, I think it would have been a year or two after the Civil War ended and the Emancipation Proclamation was issued. | ||
Of course, when the Emancipation Proclamation was issued, it didn't actually free any slaves. | ||
It actually had provisions saying the states that are in the Union can still have slaves. | ||
It freed all the slaves in the Southern states, which at the time were not under the control of the federal government. | ||
So it didn't, it didn't actually free any slaves when it was first issued. | ||
But once the Civil War was won, obviously the Emancipation Proclamation came into effect, but it still took a while for the news to arrive in the farther reaches of the frontier. | ||
And so June 19th was the date that the news of emancipation was delivered from a balcony in Galveston to the people of Texas. | ||
So for a while, it was like a Texas central holiday, Texas centered holiday. | ||
As it was about the news arriving in Texas, and it used to be in high school. | ||
It was an excuse to go to Miller Outdoor Theater in Houston and listen to Zydeco music and dance. | ||
And it was very fun. | ||
Maybe I was just missing out on the. | ||
Like racial overtones of it all, obviously it was. | ||
About the end of slavery. | ||
But it didn't feel exclusionary. | ||
Now it feels exclusionary. | ||
It felt, in high school at least, like a corollary to July 4th in that July 4th was the declaration of, you know, the promise of America and Juneteenth was sort of its fulfillment. | ||
It was a time when, because at the time, California I think was, I'm not even sure if it was a state yet. | ||
When was California made a state? | ||
Texas was made a state in 1845. | ||
I think Texas was the farthest flung state at that point. | ||
State of the Union. | ||
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1850. | |
Okay, so California was a state at that point. | ||
It was never a slave state. | ||
So it represented sort of the abolishing of slavery nationwide at that point. | ||
And again, in the good old days, 20 years ago, it felt like just a celebration of being American. | ||
Now it really doesn't feel that way. | ||
I don't know, it just feels kind of bizarre to have a federal holiday that seems exclusive to a minority population. | ||
Like happy Juneteenth? | ||
Okay. | ||
I guess. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I liked it when it was a celebration of the end of slavery, the promise of America, unity. | ||
It has since been twisted and warped and perverted and is now a racial holiday, I guess, for black people. | ||
But I think It should be more than that. | ||
I think it should be a celebration of white people. | ||
I think it should be a celebration of the European character that abolished slavery worldwide. | ||
Essentially. | ||
I mean, around the world, slavery still flourishes. | ||
Not in the white places, obviously, but everywhere else, you know, pretty much. | ||
Obviously, Africa has cobalt mines and just horrific conditions. | ||
That is basically akin to chattel slavery, but chattel slavery as a concept doesn't really exist anymore. | ||
It did for all of human history. | ||
For as long as human beings have interacted with each other, there's been some form of slavery or another and chattel slavery was a very widespread phenomenon. | ||
Forever throughout history. | ||
Until white people decided to abolish it. | ||
And England actually spent like an entire year's of their military and governmental budget to eradicate the slave trade, stop the Portuguese and others from participating in the transatlantic trade. | ||
But of course, slavery still exists in an official capacity in places like Qatar and the UAE, where you have the new World Cup stadiums built with slave labor. | ||
Obviously, China It's not chattel slavery, but it is a form of slavery where even your final escape of suicide is stolen from you with suicide nets preventing you from escaping even through death. | ||
What is that flag? | ||
The hell is that? | ||
Radio listeners, I guess this is what you get when you search Juneteenth on Google. | ||
What was that flag? | ||
It just said like freedom and these hands went by. | ||
What is that flag though? | ||
I'm very confused. | ||
That's not an American flag. | ||
You see what I'm saying? | ||
Like they're wearing like African colors and there's some mysterious flag. | ||
I would like to know what flag that is. | ||
It's not America. | ||
It's not about America. | ||
But obviously. | ||
You know, slavery still exists in a very widespread way. | ||
But not in the West, not in places where the European diaspora has settled. | ||
We decided to end it worldwide and we're largely successful. | ||
Of course, white people were for a very long time the primary victims of Slave trades. | ||
The Ottomans depopulated the coast of Ireland. | ||
The word Slavic sounds a lot like slave, doesn't it? | ||
Well, that's because that's what the Romans saw them as. | ||
It's like these are the slaves from this area and the people still in that area are the slaves we just haven't caught yet. | ||
And of course, there's the Civil War and the hundreds of thousands of Americans who died to free the slaves. | ||
So I think, I think that should be, I think that would, that would make Juneteenth worthy and useful. | ||
It's celebrating the cultural achievements and advancements. | ||
Oh, it's the Juneteenth flag. | ||
Wonderful. | ||
There's a flag. | ||
There's a flag I'm learning. | ||
Juneteenth flag is a symbol for the Juneteenth holiday. | ||
First version was created in 1977 by activist Ben Hyeth. | ||
Who's this Ben Hythe character? | ||
Let's do a little, let's do a little, uh, hopscotch. | ||
Boston Ben, American activist from Boston, Massachusetts, active in anti-crime groups since 1980s. | ||
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Oh, he's a racist. | |
He's a, he's a pro-cop racist, probably. | ||
Yeah, we should, we should celebrate it as the, as the cultural achievement, uh, one not achieved by Any other group of people for tens of thousands of years until the European continent advanced to a point slavery was not just unnecessary but horribly abhorrent and it was abolished. | ||
And isn't that nice? | ||
Isn't that nice to live in a world advanced enough to recognize the horrors of slavery? | ||
And to work and sacrifice and fight to abolish it. | ||
What a beautiful thing that is. | ||
So we should recognize the cultural achievements and advancements that abolished slavery worldwide, courtesy of the European people, and should use it as a time to advocate against the slavery that still exists now. | ||
Slavery that is perpetuated by big tech companies. | ||
Offshoring their manufacturing to places where slavery can lower their production costs. | ||
Or mining the rare earth minerals with gangs of slaves. | ||
or the slave trade open air slave markets in Libya following the collapse of the Gaddafi government. | ||
And it is just one of those things. | ||
It could be nice. | ||
It would be nice if these sorts of cultural achievements, these sorts of, you know, the fulfillment of the promise of America was a chance to celebrate all of America. | ||
Instead, it's been hijacked by the left who despise America, who ironically blame white people alone for slavery, despite that being a total inversion of reality. | ||
Any time to further hammer white people for the sins of their ancestors, while of course denying them the glory of their ancestors. | ||
This was spoken very eloquently about in clip number seven. | ||
I'm not sure who this guy is. | ||
Maybe his name's on the video, but I just saw it reposted. | ||
I wish I could give the guy credit, but here he is talking about the truth about slavery. | ||
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Black people sold black people, white people just paid for it. | |
My great-great-grandmother was sold by her father to another black man, who then sold her to who became her husband and had kids. | ||
Not a white person in sight. | ||
So while people are being stuck on, especially when I hear this dumbass thing as reparations for slavery, I'm like, dude, slavery was everywhere in the world. | ||
There was slavery in the Arab world, in the Persian world, in the Greek world, in Europe. | ||
White, blonde, blue-eyed Polish people were slaves to Germans. | ||
White, blonde, blue-eyed Germans. | ||
So what are you talking about? | ||
Like slavery is something that only black... You guys pay too much respect to racism. | ||
Yeah. | ||
If we were all white, or we were all black, we're still going to discriminate against each other. | ||
You know who we're discriminating against? | ||
Eye color. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
It's human nature. | ||
It's human nature. | ||
You'll find something. | ||
Oh, your ear is too big. | ||
I tell people, as long as you're a competition, you're a threat. | ||
And as long as you're a threat, somebody will try to do something to remove you. | ||
It doesn't matter if you're white or black. | ||
And on the opposite side, as long as you can add value, doesn't matter if you're black or if you're white, you will be appreciated or recognized. | ||
Very, very well said. | ||
Very well said. | ||
And that is what it's about. | ||
And again, I wish, I wish we lived in a world where white people weren't under constant attack. | ||
I'm sick of talking about it too, but that's just the case now. | ||
If black people were being discriminated against and demonized and openly told that their DNA is evil and their children being Basically traumatized in elementary school being told that they're the cause of all the world's problems Yeah, I'd stand up against that that's not happening though. | ||
That is happening to white people. | ||
So it's incumbent on people With the with a heart with a good moral compass to stand up against this No matter who it's affecting And it's just sad to see what could be a An opportunity for celebrating the promise and the fulfillment of that promise of America, of everybody, of every race, color, and creed being free to follow their conscience. | ||
But instead, it's been hijacked as a way to further divide people. | ||
So, I feel like I can't, I can't in good conscience participate Knowing how this has been hijacked and warped. | ||
Tony... I can't pronounce that. | ||
Tonya and Wanyu. | ||
Thank you, Dan. | ||
I don't know how you knew how to say that. | ||
Tonya and Wanyanwu. | ||
I don't know how to say it, but I like the guy. | ||
And there's his Instagram post. | ||
So anyway, that's my Juneteenth spiel. | ||
Something that I used to look forward to a lot and now just feel embarrassed that I used to be so into it. | ||
Isn't that sad? | ||
Isn't that sad? | ||
Not really though. | ||
Not really. | ||
I just didn't see how it was going to be hijacked in the way that it was. | ||
So I'll hold on to my fond memories of boogieing down at Miller Outdoor Theater. | ||
To the New Orleans Brass Band. | ||
Alright, we've got a lot of news to cover today. | ||
We're going to be joined by Henry Facey in the second hour to talk about how he infiltrated an illegal migrant camp in Massachusetts. | ||
He's done this multiple times. | ||
His latest footage is no less shocking than the earlier stuff. | ||
And then we pre-recorded an interview with Peter St. | ||
Onge that we'll be playing in the third hour. | ||
He is a very, very highly informed economist. | ||
I'm very excited to show you our conversation that we had yesterday. | ||
So big show for you today. | ||
Coming up, we'll begin today as we do every day with our daily dispatch. | ||
unidentified
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All right, here it is, folks. | |
Your Daily Dispatch for Wednesday, the 19th of June, 2024. | ||
Feds building massive detention facilities in all 50 states to imprison political dissidents, documentary claims. | ||
The U.S. | ||
federal government is in the process of building a massive network of internment camps spanning all 50 states intended not to house illegal aliens, but political dissidents, a shocking documentary claims. | ||
Speaking to redacted Clayton Morris, former Customs and Border Protection agent J.J. | ||
Carroll revealed a Whistleblower, in his upcoming documentary called Treason, exposes the scheme to build massive facilities that can house tens of thousands of people in every single state. | ||
It's not for these illegals, says former federal contractor Christy Hutcherson in an excerpt from the documentary. | ||
I believe it's kind of like what the Nazis did with the Jews. | ||
Concentration camps, processing facilities, they're going to need somewhere to process the dissidents, she said. | ||
The 24-year-old, 24-year CBP veteran went on to tell Morrison Hutcherson that access to federal databases, he has access where bids are placed for a variety of contracts. | ||
But she says to me there's bids for detention facilities being built in all 50 states in America. | ||
There's also deals with organizations, corporations like Walmart, to convert their stores into holding facilities as well. | ||
They are planning on detaining and corralling massive numbers of Americans. | ||
For what purpose and at what sign? | ||
We don't know, but they are preparing. | ||
Now, they say these camps are not to be used for illegal aliens, but they could be. | ||
But actually, they could be, though. | ||
So, this is the thing. | ||
All of the stuff the New World Order is preparing for us is a gamble on their part. | ||
They're gambling that they remain in power. | ||
If they don't remain in power, what they've done is constructed the weapons that will be used against them. | ||
If we have the will to use them. | ||
Moving on. | ||
Speaking of the migrant invasion, migrant accused of sexually assaulting 13-year-old girl in New York City Park was ordered removed by immigration judge two years ago. | ||
The Ecuadorian migrant arrested Tuesday in the sexual assault of a 13-year-old girl in Queens Park has been ordered to leave the U.S. | ||
back in 2022, the Post has learned. | ||
An immigration judge in New York City ordered Christian Giovanni Ignalandi, 25, to leave the country February 2, 2022, according to DHS sources. | ||
He crossed the besieged U.S.-Mexico border on June 25, 2021, with his son, into Eagle Pass, Texas, where he was captured, processed, and released by Border Patrol agents, according to the sources. | ||
He and his then three-year-old son were released to a local nonprofit organization with a document providing a future court date, known as a Notice to Appear document. | ||
And he went on to rape a 13-year-old girl at knifepoint in a city park. | ||
Oh, these families, these poor innocent families seeking shelter. | ||
Now he was using his 3-year-old son as a boarding pass, as a passport to get into our country. | ||
Probably with the intention from the very beginning, getting his hands on an American girl. | ||
Meanwhile, avian bird flu suddenly becomes cow flu as dairy farms begin culling animals to destroy the domestic food supply. | ||
The story from Infowars.com. | ||
The fulfillment of what we reported on weeks ago, where they were issuing PCR tests to every cow in America, knowing that eventually there would be a positive result, especially with the easily manipulatable results from PCR tests. | ||
Easily get false positives. | ||
You can choose to do it or it'll just happen. | ||
Naturally, because they're not designed to do what they're being used to do right now. | ||
So they prepared everything. | ||
They had all the orders for culling. | ||
They had all of the processes in place, just waiting for that inevitable positive PCR test. | ||
They've got some, so now they are culling the cow population. | ||
Not because bird flu is actually a threat to humans. | ||
But because they're using it as an excuse to shut down our ability to feed ourselves in order to make us dependent on a global system of supply. | ||
Meanwhile, Russia and North Korea signed mutual defense pact. | ||
The Russian President Vladimir Putin and the North Korean leader Kim Jong-un have signed a pact that includes a clause requiring the countries to come to each other's aid if either is attacked. | ||
Yes, another Easily foreseeable side effect of the Ukraine war driving our enemies into each other's hands and forming the alliances that we will soon go to war against. | ||
Speaking of, Israel and Lebanon escalate rhetoric as US tries to prevent war. | ||
Not very hard though, let's be honest. | ||
Yeah, I'm trying, just not, you know, super hard. | ||
Israel Foreign Minister Israel Katz warned on Tuesday that a decision on all-out war with Hezbollah was coming soon, even as the United States tries to avert any escalation. | ||
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U.S. | |
Envoy Amos Hochstein was sent to Lebanon. | ||
That's a very, very unbiased envoy, I'm sure. | ||
Had to try to cool tensions following an increase in cross-border fire along Lebanon's southern frontier that's escalated to Hezbollah, hinting it could attack Haifa, Israel's third-largest city. | ||
In an all-out war, Hezbollah will be destroyed and Lebanon will be severely beaten, says the Israeli leader. | ||
Israel's military later said that operational plans for an offensive in Lebanon were approved and validated, and decisions were taken on the continuation of increasing the readiness of troops in the field. | ||
Yeah, they're planning on bombing Beirut like they're bombing Gaza. | ||
It's not that complicated. | ||
They can't actually destroy Hezbollah. | ||
They can't even destroy Hamas. | ||
Hamas is still carrying out effective counterattacks against people in the north of Gaza. | ||
They haven't even cleared out a segment of Gaza yet, but they think they're going to be able to clear out Hezbollah from Lebanon. | ||
Okay, we're talking about We're talking about, in terms of power level, Droopy the Dog versus Superman here. | ||
It's totally cut off from supply, totally impoverished, tiny area, totally surveilled, totally surrounded by enemies. | ||
Lebanon, on the other hand, borders to foreign countries, massive supply of armaments, weapons manufacturing facilities, a mountainous region that you cannot invade. | ||
At all. | ||
I was gonna say easily, but really you just it's almost impossible to invade it. | ||
So what do they think they're doing here? | ||
What they're doing is they're putting Israel in an existential crisis in order to force America's to come to their aid and be embroiled in a full-fledged way in a new war in the Middle East. | ||
Just one front in the global world war currently being raged. | ||
One of the interesting things about the modern world is you get to see PSYOPs Born and bred in real time. | ||
Yesterday we saw Kareem Jean-Pierre claim that the videos of Joe Biden looking like a complete incompetent idiot were cheap fakes. | ||
Half laughing, half terrified at the idea that the Modern establishment, the White House, is literally telling us that real videos of things that actually happened were AI generated and not real. | ||
Truly bizarre. | ||
Now, for our country, I think, to have any hope whatsoever, this should have been met with a chorus of denunciation from the mainstream media. | ||
Because everybody can recognize what a disturbing | ||
Precedent this is setting It's like actually it's like actually kind of terrifying knowing that You can actually capture something on video and the authorities who have been entrusted have been empowered Have been authorized is the sole Exercisers of physical force In this country, it's terrifying that these people with this inordinate power and control are | ||
Would look you right in the eye and say, that's a deepfake. | ||
That's AI. | ||
That's not real. | ||
That's Russian disinformation. | ||
I'm talking about Soviet-level propaganda. | ||
I don't even know if the Soviets were this brazen. | ||
And so you would expect the media, even if just to preserve their own frayed and practically broken at this point, Trust in the American people have for them. | ||
You would expect them, even if out of a sense of self-preservation, to go, all right, we're not going to go along with this. | ||
You can make up a name for these videos, but they still exist and this is still real. | ||
But that's not what's happened. | ||
No, instead you get headlines like this. | ||
Cheap fake Biden videos burst onto national spotlight. | ||
White House officials are aggressively pushing back against a wave of cheap fake videos that purportedly show President Biden being So the mainstream media is on board with this. | ||
This is how it works. | ||
They have received the signal. | ||
They were all wondering, you know, we can't just ignore these videos. | ||
There are too many of them. | ||
I use artificial intelligence, but our cropped or edited in a way that's misleading marks the latest instance of how technology may be used deceptively during the 2024 campaign. | ||
So the mainstream media is on board with this. | ||
This is how it works. | ||
They have received the signal. | ||
They were all wondering, you know, we can't just ignore these videos. | ||
There are too many of them. | ||
They're constant. | ||
They never end. | ||
Every day there's another one. | ||
We can't just pretend to be blind to this. | ||
Everybody knows we're lying in that case. | ||
So what do we do? | ||
And then they're given the phrase, the word. | ||
The double, the double speak label. | ||
Cheap fake. | ||
They go, oh, thank goodness. | ||
Now we can just call them cheap fakes. | ||
It doesn't mean anything. | ||
It literally means nothing. | ||
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It means nothing. | |
It means absolutely nothing. | ||
It's like just erase the word cheap fake with some other made up nonsense. | ||
We're going to call him bedoozle. | ||
Just bedoozle Biden videos burst on national spotlight. | ||
It's just like this doesn't mean anything. | ||
It's not a label that means any what it means is it's a video of that looks bad for the Democrats. | ||
That's all the cheap fake means. | ||
Cheap fake. | ||
It's just a label that means the mainstream media can Have justification for ignoring bad publicity about Joe Biden. | ||
In other words, if they see a video of Joe Biden failing to exit a room or walk across a lawn or walk upstairs or look the correct direction during a major event or not poop himself, if you get a video of him failing to do one of these things, You can just ignore it and go, well, I'm not going to fall for this cheap fake. | ||
In other words, I'm not going to air the thing that makes us look bad. | ||
And I'm able to pretend that it's not pure partisan hackery because I have this term now. | ||
I have this word called cheap fake, and now I can just ignore the, I can ignore reality now. | ||
Now, that's what it means. | ||
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I... | |
I get why... | ||
The White House would want to push this. | ||
And it just, it... It's sad to me to know that this is how it works. | ||
That the White House comes up with this term. | ||
It means absolutely nothing. | ||
It doesn't... It doesn't disprove anything. | ||
It's not, it's just, it's just literally nothing. | ||
And then it gets pushed out to the media and seeing all the media just pared it back verbatim. | ||
And it's... | ||
It's everywhere, right? | ||
The stories from The Hill, but CNN, CBS, they all have these stories now. | ||
White House battles cheap fake videos. | ||
Cheap fake videos are a new phenomenon, a new danger of uncontrolled media that we have to be on guard for. | ||
And so you know that message is getting to people where, you know, if they aren't watching InfoWars, If they aren't seeing all the videos of Joe Biden daily, almost hourly, making a complete fool of himself, then all they know they're being primed that, hey, if you see a video of Biden making a fool of himself, just shrug it off. | ||
Just go, ah, it's a cheap fake. | ||
I don't have to pay attention to that. | ||
I don't have to think about that. | ||
I don't have to. | ||
You know, fold this new revelation into my pre-existing worldview. | ||
I can just ignore it. | ||
My worldview can go uncontested by reality. | ||
It is... It's legitimately sad knowing that if I were to go out in the street right now, but I guarantee you, people have already gotten the message. | ||
They've already heard this. | ||
If I go up to people in the street, I guarantee you if I say, what about all these videos of Joe Biden being an incompetent zombie? | ||
What about all these videos where his brain stops working halfway through the sentence? | ||
I guarantee you already, a good portion of people would go, Oh, those are cheap. | ||
Oh, those are just cheap fakes. | ||
Oh, those are just cheap fakes. | ||
Those are dishonestly edited. | ||
I mean, they say that about Project Veritas. | ||
They say it about everything. | ||
It's just not true. | ||
Again, how they can even say this with a straight face when the videos that we're talking about are totally uncut, just straight up Cell phone or broadcast footage of an event. | ||
Not a single cut, not a single edit, not a single manipulation, and yet they just say that it is. | ||
Totally shameless. | ||
Totally, utterly shameless. | ||
Don't we have, we have a video from yesterday of Joe Biden. | ||
I mean he, it is, it's not, It's not like an occasional thing. | ||
I know if you watch this show, you've probably heard this quite a bit. | ||
But it's... It just goes to the level of mind control the mainstream media has. | ||
Let's go to clip number five here. | ||
Remember yesterday we showed you three instances in 24 hours. | ||
Joe Biden getting lost on stage and having Obama carry him around, Georgia Maloney having to turn him around to face the thing that everybody's looking at, and then the video of him trying to say something about jobs, and his son says Joe Jobs, and unemployment is higher than lower unemployment is Joe Jobs. | ||
I mean, Totally embarrassing. | ||
That was yesterday. | ||
Today we have a new clip. | ||
Because of course we do. | ||
Because it's constant. | ||
Here's the latest cheap fake. | ||
Maybe we should just embrace it. | ||
Kind of like how they tried to coin the term fake news and Trump was just like, you're fake news. | ||
Maybe that's what we need to do. | ||
We should be like, here's the, you know, cheap fake just needs to be the term now for the cheap fake government that we have. | ||
This is a video of the cheap fake Administration at work. | ||
Biden is a cheap fake. | ||
Maybe we can turn this around on him. | ||
Maybe we can head him off at the pass. | ||
So here's the latest cheap fake video of cheap fake President Biden trying to say words and failing. | ||
Clip five. | ||
unidentified
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Thanks to all the members of Congress and Homeland Security Secretary. | |
I'm not sure you know who I am. | ||
Yeah, cheap fake Biden. | ||
There's cheap fake old cheap fake Biden trying to, uh, I don't was I was even trying to say words. | ||
Homeland Secretary. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that's Biden. | |
Biden the cheap fake. | ||
I think that's it. | ||
I think that's the strategy. | ||
Biden is a cheap fake. | ||
Videos of Biden is videos of a cheap fake. | ||
Welcome back, folks. | ||
There's some pretty big developments in COVID revelations from Reason.com. | ||
Anthony Fauci's inner circle initially thought COVID came from a lab. | ||
unidentified
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Not that they told us that. | |
They'd rather bury what they know about the global once-in-a-lifetime pandemic. | ||
I'm sure that makes it easier to figure out how to combat and mitigate it, right? | ||
When the people that know about it lie about it. | ||
Again, it doesn't matter if you believe our version of COVID or the mainstream media version of COVID. | ||
You were lied to. | ||
And if you think that COVID was a mysterious disease that was really a big problem that everybody was just doing their best, like, that's a lie. | ||
You have to admit that's a lie now. | ||
You have to. | ||
They knew it came from a lab. | ||
They lied to you. | ||
We knew it was a lab. | ||
Obviously they did as well. | ||
Virologist Bob Gary said at the time, I really can't think of a plausible natural scenario where you get the bad virus or one very similar to it, COVID-19, where you insert exactly four amino acids, 12 nucleotides, and have to be added at exactly the same time to gain this function. | ||
I just can't figure out how this gets accomplished in nature. | ||
It's not crackpot to suggest this could have happened given the gain of function research we know was happening in Wuhan. | ||
Even Ralph Baric, world-famous gain-of-function researcher and collaborator with the Wuhan Institute of Virology, Dr. Zhizhi Zhengli, Zhengli, admitted, so the Wuhan Institute of Virology has a very large collection of viruses at the laboratory, and so it's, you know, proximity is a problem. | ||
It's a problem! | ||
Yeah, they knew it came from a lab. | ||
And do you know who they sent to investigate the origin of the virus? | ||
Ralph Baric. | ||
Did he investigate the lab? | ||
unidentified
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No. | |
Even though they knew that's where it came from. | ||
One in a billion chance COVID emerged from nature, scientist tells lawmakers. | ||
The COVID-19 lab leak theory, far from being a myth or conspiracy theory, is supported by a, quote, preponderance of evidence U.S. | ||
senators today acknowledged in a historic bipartisan hearing. | ||
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Chairman Gary Peters, a Democratic senator from Michigan and ranking member Senator Rand Paul, led the two-hour committee examining the available evidence on the origins of COVID-19. | ||
The airing was Broadcast on cable television here is Senator Rand Paul's opening statement to that committee To answer this question, let's revisit the early days of the pandemic and examine what some of Dr. Anthony Fauci's inner circles said privately about the origins of the virus. | ||
Discussions that were only revealed through FOIA litigation. | ||
Christian Anderson wrote, the lab escape version of this is so friggin likely to have happened because they were already doing this type of work and the molecular data is fully consistent with that scenario. | ||
Ian Lipkin stressed the nightmare of circumstantial evidence to assess regarding the possibility of inadvertent release given the scale of bat coronavirus research pursued in Wuhan. | ||
Bob Gary said, I really can't think of a plausible natural scenario where you get from the bad virus or one very similar to it to COVID-19, where you insert exactly four amino acids, 12 nucleotides, and all have to be added at the exact same time to gain this function. | ||
I just can't figure out how this gets accomplished in nature. | ||
According to Gary, it's not crackpot to suggest this could have happened given the gain-of-function research we know was happening at Wuhan. | ||
These are all private statements, which you'll discover today differ greatly from their public statements. | ||
Yeah, they were lying in public. | ||
They were telling the truth in private. | ||
This has only been revealed through FOIA requests. | ||
But now the evidence is overwhelming. | ||
And despite the fact that you could have gotten kicked off the internet for saying this, because it was misinformation, fake news, anti-vax conspiracy theories, whatever other label they used to silence the truth, and now it's all coming out. | ||
One of the expert witnesses was Dr. Stephen C. Quay. | ||
I'm going to play as much of his statement as we can get to here. | ||
So clip number four is Dr. Stephen Quay highlighting six reasons why COVID-19 is almost certainly, without a doubt, the product of a lab leak from a gain-of-function experiment. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
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I am a physician scientist and have a 50-year career spanning academic medical research, biotechnology, and scientific fraud investigation. | |
My biography summarizes my career. | ||
I speak today, however, as an independent scientist. | ||
I do not receive any NIH or NIAID funding. | ||
Scientists dependent on NIH or NIAID funding may have pressure to publicly agree with orthodoxies that privately they admit are wrong. | ||
My approach to the COVID pandemic origin that killed 20 million plus people, caused $20 trillion in economic damage, is based on six approaches to the data and the events. | ||
I'll start with something Dr. Gary said privately, quote, someone should tell nature, meaning the British Journal, that the fish market probably did not start the outbreak, end quote. | ||
I agree with Dr. Gary. | ||
Unfortunately, one reason we are having these hearings is that the public statements of many virologists have not been congruent with their private conversations. | ||
In any case, I'll describe the six approaches to the question that all support a lab leak as a source and can go deeper into each of those with questions. | ||
First, the virus was spreading in Wuhan and around the world in the fall of 2019, months before the first case in the Hunan seafood market. | ||
This is supported by 14 observations or evidence. | ||
The evidence includes the calculation of the time to the most recent common ancestor, hospital overloads in Wuhan, antibodies in patients from Italy, Spain, and the U.S., wastewater samples from Brazil, sick athletes at the October Wuhan military games, school closings in Wuhan. | ||
And dozens of documented patients. | ||
This dismisses out of hand the market as the origin. | ||
But second, let's look at the market data. | ||
The human infections, the animal samples, and the environmental specimens. | ||
These generate eight observations. | ||
No infected animals in the market or the supply chain were infected. | ||
No infected wildlife vendors had SARS. | ||
All human infections are the non-ancestral lineage B. The environmental specimens with animal DNA have no SARS-2. | ||
One vendor had animals from southern China where SARS-2 came from, but this vendor and his animals are negative for SARS-2. | ||
Now, only one of 14 environmental samples with raccoon dog DNA contains SARS reads, and that contains one read out of 210 million. | ||
13 of the 14 raccoon dog DNA specimens had no SARS-2. | ||
With SARS-1, literally 100% of the market animals were infected. | ||
I frankly think it is shameful for scientists to mislead journalists and the public, saying these data I just described are evidence raccoon dogs were infected with SARS-2. | ||
This is why trust in science is broken. | ||
None of these data are consistent with an infected animal passing SARS-2 to a human at the market. | ||
The 1,500-kilometer distance to the nearest SARS-2-related virus is like the distance from Washington, D.C. | ||
to the Florida Everglades. | ||
Imagine you're at dinner at a restaurant in North Bethesda near the NIAID labs. | ||
You get sick, and you are told that the virus you caught is only found in bats from the Everglades, but it also happens to be under study at the laboratories you see outside the restaurant window. | ||
That's what the market origin people are asking you to believe. | ||
Third, documented events at or related to Wuhan Institute of Virology beginning in March 2019 are consistent with the expected activities when a lab-acquired infection has occurred. | ||
This timeline includes unusual attention from the Chinese Communist Party, leading to the PLA physician soldier being put in charge. | ||
Large tender requests to repair biosafety equipment. | ||
A virus database disappearing in the middle of the night. | ||
Large tender requests for a lab security force to, quote, handle foreign personnel, end quote. | ||
Patents for a device to prevent a lab-acquired infection. | ||
Rumors in the virology community of a new SARS virus in the lab. | ||
30 vials of the three most dangerous viruses on the planet being shipped illegally from a lab in Canada to the WIV in March. | ||
And then one of those pathogens being found as a major contaminant in a BLSA lab in December. | ||
These events taken together are a classic example of closing the barn door after the horses left. | ||
Fourth, the evidence that is found in a natural zoonosis with respect to the animal host, the virus, and the human are missing with COVID. | ||
96,000 animals were tested and are negative for SARS-2. | ||
43,000 blood samples from blood donors in Wuhan were tested. | ||
A natural spillover like SARS-1 would have produced about 260 positives. | ||
A lab accident would be zero. | ||
And of course, zero is what is found. | ||
Listen folks, the evidence is overwhelming. | ||
That's Dr. Stephen Quay. | ||
His testimony goes on for another few minutes. | ||
We've got to go to break here. | ||
I just want to explain that this is why they want InfoWars off the air. | ||
They can pretend that they didn't know this. | ||
Now, that's been exposed. | ||
We have their personal statements now. | ||
They show that they knew it was a lab leak from the very beginning, but so did we. | ||
So did we. | ||
And we are here telling you that it was a lab leak from before most mainstream outlets had even mentioned that COVID existed. | ||
Jump Force really is tomorrow's news today, next year's news today, next decade's news today at this point. | ||
They need us off the air to carry out their lies because they require total complicity to the deception from the mainstream and alternative media. | ||
So support us at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Keep us on the air and keep their lies at bay. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Welcome back. | ||
unidentified
|
Ladies and gentlemen, second hour of American Journal is on. | |
We'll be joined in a few minutes by Henry Facey. | ||
Continuing to expose what our tax dollars are being spent on. | ||
Spoiler alert, it ain't us. | ||
It's not the American people that are receiving the benefits of our hard work. | ||
unidentified
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Which, in a way, can make us slaves. | |
Aren't we kind of slaves, right? | ||
Isn't that the heart of slavery you work, I eat? | ||
How many people Are subsisting off of the work of a very, very small number of productive Americans. | ||
I mean, if you're paying half of your income, like people in California do, they pay more. | ||
If you make a million dollars in California, you pay over $500,000 in taxes. | ||
$500,000 in taxes. | ||
You're not half a slave. | ||
We're just before the benefits of slavery, the benefits of the labor sold by the people at the top, the elites who own the slaves. | ||
Now it's like an inversion where the productive upstanding members of society are slaves to the people not working. | ||
It's very strange how this has worked out. | ||
So you still have a population of slaves in America. | ||
It's just they get to work for themselves part of the time. | ||
And the masters in this situation are the people whose lives are going nowhere and who are stuck in intergenerational dependency on the government. | ||
Amazing. | ||
So we'll get into illegal immigration in this hour, of course. | ||
There's a lot more to cover here. | ||
U.S. | ||
has ramped up intel sharing with Israel, alarming Democrat lawmakers. | ||
Washington has significantly ramped up its intelligence sharing with Israel, despite recent attempts by the Biden administration to distance itself from large-scale civilian casualties mounting from the Rafah ground invasion, as well as airstrikes across the Gaza Strip. | ||
The Washington Post has documented the Pentagon is now handing an extraordinary amount of intelligence to Tel Aviv, including drone footage, satellite imagery, communication intercepts, and data analysis. | ||
using advanced software, some of it powered by artificial intelligence. | ||
Much of it is said to be focused on hostage location efforts, given that among the October 7th captives there are eight Americans, but three are since believed deceased. | ||
Not, I remind you, killed by the captors. | ||
The report confirmed the presence of U.S. | ||
military's elite Joint Special Operations Command at a CIA station in Israel, as well as personnel from the Defense Intelligence Agency. | ||
These U.S. | ||
intel officials have been meeting with their counterparts on the country on a daily basis. | ||
The State Department also has a special envoy on the ground, while the FBI is assisting ongoing investigations related to October 7th. | ||
So we are very much involved in the war in Gaza right now. | ||
We are very much helping Israel. | ||
To carry out their ethnic cleansing operation. | ||
Washington Post also revealed that earlier in the war the U.S. | ||
had intricate plans for potential hostage operation to retrieve the remaining American captives, dual nationals, held by Hamas. | ||
That operation, which would have been extraordinarily high risk both militarily as well as politically for the Biden administration, was shelved. | ||
All this increased intel sharing has worried some lawmakers who don't want the United States to be seen as too hand in glove with Israeli operations in Gaza. | ||
They don't want to be seen as being too hand-in-glove. | ||
They are hand-in-glove. | ||
They just don't want you to know. | ||
That's what that means. | ||
And they admit that Washington has no effective means of monitoring how Israel uses the U.S. | ||
information. | ||
So we are providing Israel with access to, you know, top-secret surveillance technology in the hopes that If we tell, cause remember a few months ago, it was like, Biden was like, well, we know where the hostages are, right? | ||
We have information. | ||
We have technology that the Israelis don't have access to. | ||
And it's almost, you know, it's almost like they, if they would, if they would have shared it with Israel eight months ago, seven months ago, it would have been too obvious that they weren't actually trying to rescue hostages. | ||
Right? | ||
Cause right now they can pretend like, well, we don't know where they are. | ||
So we're just bombing everywhere. | ||
But now they do know where they are, because they have this information, and yet they're still bombing everywhere. | ||
Hmm. | ||
Interesting. | ||
Interesting how that works. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We'll be joined by Henry Facey at Info Uncensored and premiere his latest investigation, his incursion behind enemy lines to the ongoing self-colonization program taking place, taking our money and our Future and giving it to criminals whose only act in America is to break our laws. | ||
Very excited to talk to him. | ||
So let's talk about before we get to that war. | ||
Let's talk about the world war that is rapidly being constructed. | ||
U.S. has reportedly ramped up intel sharing with Israel. | ||
Providing them access to our most highly classified and powerful surveillance technologies. | ||
As we are intricately involved in the Gaza ethnic cleansing operation. | ||
You know, on this note, maybe we should talk about this tweet. | ||
I'm not sure if I put it in the, but I put it in the rundown here. | ||
because there's a did I forget to put it in I'll have to find it. | ||
I'll find this in a second because it's Richard Hanania or something on X who talks about the potential deportation of tens of millions of illegal immigrants in terms of ethnic cleansing and compares it to what Israel is doing in Gaza. | ||
And it's like, you've got to learn how to sell this. | ||
It's like, no, nobody wants to Somebody wants to bomb Mexico to smithereens. | ||
Somebody wants to commit ethnic cleansing on our neighbors in America. | ||
We don't do that here. | ||
There's something violent about deporting somebody. | ||
I mean, if they fight back, there's gotta be violence. | ||
Like, asking a guest in your home to leave is not violent. | ||
If they resist and you have to throw them out, That's not your fault. | ||
That's their fault. | ||
So this comparison is so bizarre and out of whack especially when you compare it to what's going on in Gaza and it just it just sort of makes your head spin to go wait the same people that are like literally weeping and crying and telling you how evil and bad it is to just send people back to the country where they were born and lived their whole lives and grew up and have families and their own nation sending people just back home is somehow a horrible violation. | ||
It's un-American. | ||
You know, they're crying these crocodile tears. | ||
And then you've got just like, oh, and by the way, we're totally in favor of, and how dare you question, our aggressive ethnic cleansing of an entire separate nation. | ||
Deporting millions is clearly ethnic cleansing. | ||
No. | ||
Illegal immigrants are illegal regardless of their ethnicity. | ||
Dick. | ||
I'm gonna call him Dick. | ||
Nickname for Richard in some situations. | ||
It's necessary. | ||
It's necessary like when Israel tries to depopulate Gaza Because national survival is at stake See it's necessary to depopulate Gaza To save Israel But hey reversing open border influx of 10 million people That's not a threat to our nation. | ||
I mean this is a This is crazy. | ||
This is totally crazy. | ||
A lot of people speculating he was like just, you know, putting that up as bait, trying to get interaction to make money on X. But this is what people believe. | ||
And again, it highlights just the bizarre nature of conflict in the world today. | ||
So he says, conservatives need to explain how people working hard and minding their own business justify similar acts. | ||
Well, no, we don't want to Kill the families of the migrants. | ||
We're not psychopaths. | ||
We're not Israel. | ||
We're not about collective punishment. | ||
We're not about, well, you know, this kid may grow up to eventually hate us, so kill him now. | ||
No, that's not us. | ||
That's you. | ||
That's not how we do things here. | ||
So even to compare these two things is so out of whack. | ||
It is necessary to get rid of illegal immigrants. | ||
unidentified
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Do you? | |
To deport them. | ||
Now most of them will self-deport if the conditions are right. | ||
And I think it's not really all that difficult to do. | ||
I mean, basically the influx has been so overwhelming And we have no idea where people are going. | ||
It's not like we have like a big list of illegal immigrants. | ||
It's like, here's the illegal immigrant. | ||
Here's where they crossed. | ||
Here's where they're from. | ||
Here's where they're staying. | ||
There's no information like that out there. | ||
We've got list upon list of names. | ||
God only knows if it's their correct name. | ||
They've been given notices to appear, but they don't show up. | ||
They disappear into the country. | ||
We never see them again. | ||
So you've got all these illegal immigrants all over the country. | ||
All providing fake names, different names, who knows, nothing verifiable, nothing. | ||
So all you do is you go, all right, we are offering to peaceably deport everybody. | ||
We'll pay for your plane ticket. | ||
We'll get you in a shelter in Mexico or Guatemala or Ecuador, wherever you come from. | ||
We'll send you back home. | ||
And you'll be free and clear. | ||
Legit, I'd say, we're not even going to punish you. | ||
But it's up to you. | ||
But you have to turn yourself in. | ||
So here's this grace period, an amnesty of sorts. | ||
Not to remain in the country by any means, but to turn yourself in and be peacefully deported. | ||
If you don't do that, if you try to deceive us and stay here, well, then we might put the FEMA camps to use. | ||
You're so desperate to stay. | ||
You can stay. | ||
You can stay. | ||
We can use your labor. | ||
You can clean roads, chop down trees, split rocks. | ||
I think it'd be easy. | ||
You can say, hey, look, if you are here illegally, if you're an asylum seeker, you've got one month to turn yourself in to your local CBP and be peacefully deported. | ||
Otherwise, now you're going to really be punished, actually. | ||
It's necessary for the survival of our nation. | ||
What we don't have to do is level any Mexican towns. | ||
What we don't have to do is relentless bombing campaigns against people on the other side of our border. | ||
I mean, can you imagine? | ||
Can you imagine if America even did just remotely? | ||
I mean, it's not like we don't have like a reason or an excuse, right? | ||
How many thousands of people have died from fentanyl overdoses? | ||
How many thousands of people have been murdered by illegal immigrants? | ||
I mean, it might not be the cinematic shock of October 7th, but just imagine if in response to the 2020 riots in Black Lives Matter, America decided to build giant walls around all of its ghettos And then systematically bomb black people until they gave up and just begged to leave and then we, you know, sent them to Israel. | ||
I mean, if you just like switch the positions here, it becomes clear. | ||
Well, it's not even becomes clear. | ||
I was gonna say it becomes clear the, you know, sort of the moral comparison, but actually it all just gets confusing and fuzzy because it's like, wait, the same people that are viscerally against Simple actions like deporting invaders are simultaneously rabidly in favor of just ethnic cleansing genocide taking place in Gaza. | ||
So to conflate these things is utterly dishonest, but does provide sort of a framework of comparison. | ||
Go look. | ||
We might be putting people in camps, okay? | ||
We might be splitting up families here. | ||
We might be using those- but hey, at least we're not in Israel, right? | ||
At least we're not bombing them to death. | ||
At least you're not seeing videos of Mexican children with their arms and legs blown off lying in the road, right? | ||
So hey, I know you're very mad about what we're doing with the illegal immigrants, but you were all in favor of Israel, so you can shut the hell up, because you're a dishonest hypocrite. | ||
You don't actually care. | ||
You don't actually care. | ||
So it does provide sort of a framework for knowing what's acceptable. | ||
We would never go that far, because that's evil. | ||
You can always point to Israel and go, hey, you never said anything when they did it. | ||
Tucker Carlson and Glenn Greenwald got into this a little bit about Israel and the power they have over the United States. | ||
Let's go now to clip number eight. | ||
Here's Tucker Carlson and Glenn Greenwald talking about foreign aid, foreign influence from Israel in America. | ||
That our primary priority should be the people of our country. | ||
I can't tell you how many Republican members of Congress or Republican journalists or pundits I've interviewed over the last two and a half years who say We can't be financing the war in Ukraine because we don't have the money to be financing other countries wars, nor should we be doing that. | ||
Our focus should be on our own country. | ||
And every single time, well before even October 7th, I would ask him, does that also apply to Israel? | ||
And they would kind of stammer and stutter and not want to say it. | ||
But now, You know you say like you don't care about Israel and I totally understand that. | ||
The problem though is is that Israel has received far more aid from the United States than any other country by far over the last three to four decades. | ||
We pay for their military. | ||
We pay for every time there's a new war. | ||
We send them billions and billions of more on top of the four billion dollars a year that Obama negotiated with Netanyahu. | ||
Not only do that, but we arm them. | ||
The bombs that they use to kill Gazan civilians come from the United States. | ||
And I think worst of all, we isolate ourselves from the entire rest of the world. | ||
Do you know how many votes there have been at the UN over the past seven months where the entire world is on one side and Israel and the United States stand alone on the other? | ||
With, you know, a couple of those tiny little countries that we often bribe, like Micronesia and Marshall Islands, the part of the coalition of the willy. | ||
It's called Micronesia. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
Micro. | ||
It's like, so, you know, it's also just the standing in the world, like our sacrificing of soft power. | ||
So we give up so much for Israel in so many other ways that if you're an American citizen, you have to care about it, even if you don't want to. | ||
You know, one of the stories we did... Well, what I meant was, I don't, I feel emotional, like, I just have, like, gut-level affection for it, because I've had such a nice time there, and I like so many Israelis personally, and know a lot, and I just, like, there's nothing more wonderful than having dinner in Jerusalem on a summer night. | ||
It's just, I just, so I have a lot of affection. | ||
I guess that's what I'm saying. | ||
So I'm not sort of animated by You know any anything really I'm just like trying to I live here so do my kids so did my ancestors it's like I just care about this country and if you're changing my life or stripping my rights from me That we've had for 250 years on behalf of any other place, you are my enemy. | ||
Like, it's just that simple. | ||
You are my enemy. | ||
I mean, I don't know what to say. | ||
I don't want even to even have this conversation. | ||
Well, that's the amazing thing is that the devotion to Israel is so great and so incomparable to the devotion of any other foreign country that it's to the point that Their supporters, supporters of Israel, are willing to deconstruct and erode and sacrifice the core basic rights that as Americans, by definition, we're supposed to enjoy. | ||
So I won't accept that. | ||
I won't accept that. | ||
But that is what's happening. | ||
This is my country. | ||
I'm from here. | ||
I'm going to die here. | ||
I will not accept that. | ||
And I don't care what you call me. | ||
You can't take away my right to say what I think. | ||
That is the foundational right In the United States of America, and it's the only thing that prevents us from becoming, you know, Stalinist, period. | ||
And it's going away in a very rapid way. | ||
And not only that, but obviously we're sending American men over to Israel to participate in this war, put themselves at risk for the benefit of a foreign nation, not a foreign nation's protection from some, you know, superpower. | ||
That's how we, you know, America likes to picture itself as like what the what the official story with Ukraine is. | ||
This poor beleaguered little nation suffering under the might of a bigger, stronger autocratic foe. | ||
America comes and steps in selflessly puts itself in the way, says, hey, You don't get to control these smaller states. | ||
They get to do what they want. | ||
And if you mess with them, you gotta mess with that. | ||
That's like the image people like to portray. | ||
Obviously. | ||
That's not what's happening here. | ||
Obviously, whether it's Ukraine or Israel, that's not actually what's happening here. | ||
Now, what's happening is America is occupying Ukraine, took it over with a color revolution coup, where they overthrew the government and installed a puppet, and are now sacrificing hundreds of thousands entire generations of Ukrainian men for the geopolitical machinations. | ||
People like Victoria Newland and Anthony Blinken and a variety of other American administration officials with immediate family ties in Ukraine with a historical grudge against Ukraine. | ||
So that's what's actually happening there. | ||
And of course in Israel. | ||
It's the same. | ||
It's the same, but it's the same but different. | ||
Israel, in this case, is the bigger, stronger, more advanced tyrannical government that is actively ethnically cleansing Gaza. | ||
So, you know, it's just a little different, I guess. | ||
And this level of cognitive dissonance of blatant hypocrisy requires censorship to be carried out. - Yeah. | ||
Israel and Lebanon escalate rhetoric as U.S. | ||
tries to prevent war. | ||
But again, not that hard. | ||
Not that hard, right? | ||
Trying to think of an example. | ||
I tried. | ||
Yeah, I really tried. | ||
Not that hard. | ||
I didn't really want to do it, so I didn't really try that hard. | ||
No, we could stop it. | ||
We could stop this. | ||
I mean, it is a... | ||
A snap of the fingers, a flip of the wrist. | ||
I mean, it's, we just, we just say no. | ||
It's kind of like the border. | ||
It's kind of like a lot of the problems America has. | ||
The control Israel has over America, our participation in the conflicts in the Middle East. | ||
There are choices that we're making that we could easily choose not to make. | ||
Just cut them off. | ||
Just cut off Israel. | ||
And suddenly there will be peace. | ||
It is really as simple as that. | ||
If America goes, yeah, you know what, Israel, you're committing genocide according to the international court. | ||
You're clearly prolonging this for the political advantage of Benjamin Netanyahu. | ||
The people that are in favor of what's going on here are radical religious extremists that are engaged in a campaign of ethnic cleansing. | ||
The basis of that extremism, we're cutting you off. | ||
We're just no more weapons, no more money. | ||
That's it. | ||
You're cut off. | ||
You're not getting any more. | ||
The next day, it'd be like, oh, Israel and Hamas reached a peace agreement. | ||
Well, what do you know? | ||
We're prolonging this continually. | ||
It's our fault this is going on. | ||
And Israel is doing everything it can to get an open conflict with Hezbollah, knowing that America would have to intervene because Hezbollah is an existential threat to Israel. | ||
And it's not that America will intervene to save Israel from this existential threat. | ||
They'll intervene to save Israel because the other option is Israel is going to launch a nuke at Lebanon. | ||
And that's not good for humanity. | ||
So we'd have to intervene, but we're being blackmailed. | ||
Like we have a, we have a nuclear gun to our head, essentially being held by Israel. | ||
And they're essentially saying we're getting into a fight, which we're going to have to use this unless you step in and protect us. | ||
Now this, again, level of gaslighting and hypocrisy and deception and war profiteering requires uninterrupted lies, but these lies are starting to crumble. | ||
ADL faces Wikipedia ban over reliability concerns on Israel and anti-Semitism. | ||
Wikipedia's editors have voted to declare the Anti-Defamation League generally unreliable on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, adding it to a list of banned and partially banned sources. | ||
An overwhelming majority of editors involved in the debate about the ADL also voted to deem the organization unreliable on the topic of anti-semitism, its core focus. | ||
A formal declaration on that count is expected next. | ||
The decision about Israeli-related citations made last week means that one of the most prominent and long-standing Jewish advocacy groups in America, in the United States, well, pedophile defending groups. | ||
No, but they cloak themselves in Jewish activism to get funds and Guard against criticism but what they do is defame people and they were formed to protect a pedophile from and murderer from justice But it's now grouped together with the National Enquirer, Newsmax, and Occupy Democrats as a source of propaganda or misinformation in the eyes of the online encyclopedia. | ||
Moreover, in a near consensus, dozens of Wikipedia editors involved in the discussion said they believe the ADL should not be cited for factual information on antisemitism as well because it acts primarily as a pro-Israel organization that tends to label legitimate criticism of Israel as antisemitism. | ||
So people are... | ||
People are seeing through the lies. | ||
They're not being cowed by the bad names that they're being called because liars are liars and they have to be called out regardless of the reason that they say they're lying or the ethnicity that they are while lying. | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
New York Times documents Putin was willing to compromise to end war in 2022. | ||
In April 2022, Ukraine and Russia were on the brink of signing a deal to end the war just weeks after it began. | ||
New York Times published documents showing President Vladimir Putin was willing to make concessions to get an agreement signed. | ||
According to the documents, Putin initially sought to have Kiev recognize Moscow's 2014 annexation of Crimea. | ||
However, a draft agreement the next day suggested both parties were prepared to set aside that issue to end the conflict. | ||
In December, Ukrainian negotiator explained that an agreement was reached in spring 2022, stating both sides managed to find a very real compromise. | ||
We were very close in the middle of April, at the end of April, to finalize our war with some peaceful settlement. | ||
Then it all got pulled down. | ||
It all got destroyed. | ||
And the following two years of senseless Destruction and murder as a consequence of NATO Western American intervention and manipulation. | ||
Pretty incredible. | ||
Putin and Kim Jong-un were meeting as Russia and North Korea are now signing defense pacts. | ||
So just know everything that our government is involved in Everything that we're doing around the world is deliberately and effectively designed to bring us towards World War III. | ||
Peace is continually sabotaged by the people at the top. | ||
The draft is being prepared to be implemented. | ||
It's being expanded and weaponized through automatic registration. | ||
Registering women, registering people up to 26 years old rather than 24, as that has expanded. | ||
And did you know that the person who actually pushed that draft expansion bill forward herself is one generation removed from Ukraine? | ||
Would that surprise you very much? | ||
Didn't surprise me. | ||
House of Representatives passed a measure on Friday automatically registering men 18 to 26 for selective service. | ||
Representative Chrissy Houlihan led the selective service measure. | ||
Her father, Andrew C.A. | ||
Jampoler, a naval aviator, was born in Lviv, Ukraine in 1942 to a Jewish family. | ||
He and his mother also survived the Holocaust and immigrated to the United States when he was four years old. | ||
So whether it's Newland or Blinken or Chrissy Houlihan, everybody involved in this I had family that was expelled from Ukraine one generation ago. | ||
Is there... Are we starting World War III for their personal revenge? | ||
Is the ethnic national vengeance of these people what is now leading our sons to be drafted for a war against Russia? | ||
And if so, what do we do about that? | ||
We'll be back. | ||
Stay with us. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
My guest this hour is Henry Facey. | ||
You can follow him at infouncensored. | ||
He's a friend of the show, an independent journalist who has exposed the inner workings of migrant camps that we hear so much about, yet see so little of. | ||
We last saw Mr. Facey on this show back in March on the 27th, where he was talking about just that. | ||
But he's done it again. | ||
And we'll go to this video. | ||
This is from Massachusetts. | ||
He just published this. | ||
And we'll get his comments on the other side. | ||
Why are Massachusetts illegal immigrant shelters being hid from the media? | ||
Find this video at Info Uncensored. | ||
Here it is. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are Massachusetts migrant shelters being hid from the media? | |
I snuck inside five hotels in the Melnea Cass Rec Center to see where tax dollars were going. | ||
The Mass Hires Springfield Career Center is working alongside Simos, a labor management firm, to hire a legal work. | ||
Here's one of their job flyers. | ||
In another hotel, I saw that a community college was working to set up a hiring event in the healthcare field for a legal work. | ||
Here are the companies that will be hiring a legal work at that event. | ||
You can see medical centers, hospitals, and even the sheriff's office in Hampton County. | ||
Don't believe me? | ||
Here's another shot of the door with the exact same paper and another one written in English. | ||
And there's mass hire again. | ||
Self Help, Inc. | ||
is a pre-k non-profit that's given early education grants by the state of Massachusetts. | ||
State taxpayers are paying so that children and parents from other countries are able to play, sing stories, dance, and have small craft activities. | ||
Many different non-profits, including Horizons, are attempting to make grant money from the state of Massachusetts for these playscapes and daycares. | ||
Illegal families and individuals are also given housekeeping and laundry services all for free. | ||
Not to mention, if they want to work out, in some hotels they get a free gym too! | ||
And I guess in certain cases these people already have... | ||
Pets? | ||
Rooms at the Fairfield Inn Boston Dedham used to be $129. | ||
Now they're charging $180 to the state for the exact same rooms. | ||
That's $5,400 a month for one room. | ||
Imagine spending $5,400 a month on your mortgage or your rent. | ||
exact same rooms. | ||
That's $5,400 a month for one room. | ||
Imagine spending $5,400 a month on your mortgage or your rent. | ||
CBS also reported that it costs $37 per day per resident for lunch and dinner. | ||
That's $13,500 a year per person in food. | ||
And of course, they get free Wi-Fi. | ||
According to Axios Boston, the state of Massachusetts has spent more than $584 million on sheltering migrant families in the fiscal year 2024 alone. | ||
These numbers are crazy considering that Massachusetts Rental Assistance to Families in Transition, or RAFT program, only gives up to $7,000 in a 12-month period to one family. | ||
And funny enough, in April of this year, all but two of the Massachusetts House Democrats voted against an amendment that would have provided the statewide shelter priority to U.S. | ||
military veterans over these illegal migrants. | ||
But the kicker is, is that all 25 Massachusetts State House Republicans voted for it. | ||
The Massachusetts Republicans, all 25 of them, are more on the side of local homeless veterans than the Democrats are. | ||
The amendment failed 27 to 129 due to the Democrats. | ||
And of course, Massachusetts has a Democrat governor, Maura Healey. | ||
What are your thoughts on all the Democrats in the state pushing for this? | ||
Do you think this is good for local families and the local homeless veterans? | ||
Or even just the local homeless in general? | ||
Or even just the regular taxpayers in general? | ||
Let the Massachusetts House and Governor know your thoughts. | ||
Very well done video. | ||
Undercover, behind the scenes, behind enemy lines. | ||
Henry Facey at Info Uncensored on X joins me once again. | ||
Welcome back to the show, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Harrison. | |
Thank you so much for having me back and I appreciate the nice comments. | ||
Well, I just wanted to compliment you on your improving technique, I think. | ||
You know, your first videos were a little bit wild. | ||
You're running from cops, you're jumping fences. | ||
I mean, it was a little, it was very effective. | ||
You got great footage, but it was a little Wild West style. | ||
This video, very well done, very, you know, journalistically valid. | ||
Like, here's the claim, here's the proof. | ||
Extremely well done. | ||
You've been working on this. | ||
You've been improving your technique, I can see. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Yeah. | ||
Yes. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I really appreciate that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I spent a few months off and really it was about a month after I got hurt in that last, uh, I don't even know what you'd call it. | ||
There are barely even entries anymore after that. | ||
It was like a full blown battle. | ||
And, um, you know, I don't fight and I'm not violent. | ||
So I went there and I did my natural reaction of fighting out of it. | ||
And I got hurt. | ||
So I took a month off and really thought it out. | ||
And then after I thought it out, I came to the conclusion that, you know, this is the most detrimental thing on our country right now as an existential crisis. | ||
Um, and I know that that's something that certain people have said who are candidates, but it's definitely true. | ||
And you know, whether people want to admit this or not, these early education grants, these buildings, these, Enormous amounts of emergency procurements that are being given to this. | ||
It's hard to even imagine, Harrison. | ||
It's hard to imagine until you see it. | ||
And so they don't let the media see this. | ||
Lawsuits, FOIA requests, everything has to go in and they still refuse to show everything. | ||
So I made my best effort and this was my, essentially my montage, as best as I could do with the most pivotal information that I thought I found. | ||
And there was a lot more, but you can't fit it all in. | ||
Well, and you know, but luckily, I guess you were able to get in and get out this time without without being confronted. | ||
So I don't want to get too much into your your tactics. | ||
But that, you know, in and of itself is a is an advance in your technique, you know, not getting confronted at these things where you're able to, I imagine, get more information than you would otherwise. | ||
Let's just go through some of the things you want to cover there. | ||
Obviously, the amount of money is staggering. | ||
And it's not just that you've got these NGOs that are receiving grants that are taking a little off the top and then funneling the rest to foreigners that are colonizing our nation right now. | ||
But you point out that the hotels are jacking up their prices knowing that they'll be booked solid for months with government contracts and they can charge basically whatever they want. | ||
Talk a little bit about that, about just the way that people are just minting money through this process, right? | ||
Selling out America, bringing foreigners in, settling them here because it benefits them and makes them egregious amounts of money. | ||
unidentified
|
A hundred percent. | |
These hotels, they'll be two-star hotels in certain cases, and then the narrative gets out there that it's all four and five. | ||
It is in Manhattan. | ||
But then you'll go around Massachusetts and you have these two-star hotels that they'll take from $80 to $100 a night, sometimes $120 a night. | ||
Now they're charging the state of Massachusetts $180 a night or more. | ||
$120 a night. | ||
Now they're charging the state of Massachusetts $180 a night or more. | ||
So when you do this out, each room costs $5,400 a month, $5,400 a month. | ||
If you think about that like a mortgage or rent, when was the last time you went in one room of your house and paid $5,400 for it? | ||
Now, let alone, and I understand that these people are essentially at, they're below Section 8. | ||
I I mean, these are illegals. | ||
This is absolutely insane. | ||
So they figured out this way of conquering emergency grants and early education grants and turning it into this massive profiteering campaign where, you know, they don't like the governor sending all the people, but they kind of do because they make a ton of money. | ||
And Governor Tapp, what I'm talking about there, or I guess a few other governors, but Mainly Texas, mainly Arizona, mainly California. | ||
And you'll see. | ||
It's like you're going to blame all them, but the cities that you guys are paying taxes towards, the states that you guys pay taxes towards are all about it. | ||
And ironically, the Democrats are the number one group for this by far. | ||
And obviously, the people who watch this show, this is like, you know, whatever. | ||
We know. | ||
unidentified
|
But the average person is like in shock. | |
I mean, I have people hitting me up on TikTok before they shut me off recently. | ||
completely shut me off. | ||
I'm done. | ||
I mean, they cut me off. | ||
I put up that video, Harrison. | ||
I can't promote. | ||
I can't give them money. | ||
Oh, I give I give up on TikTok. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm sure is, you know, better than anybody. | |
Uh, this is insane. | ||
They literally don't care about money. | ||
I can't pay them. | ||
So they won't let me promote. | ||
They've killed my algorithm. | ||
They've killed everything. | ||
But rolling it back, this information is so insane, and they know that they're making the most amount of money they've ever made on these properties, Harrison. | ||
They're refinancing them. | ||
They were calling them something they weren't for a while, like, oh, we're going to have this beautiful neighborhood thing that we're going to build, and then it just turns into mixed-use housing and all this stuff. | ||
So they have all this... | ||
They're robbing Americans blind to pay for the lifestyles of foreigners who have invaded our country. | ||
It's sick, and Henry Facey is exposing it. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
All right, welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, Henry Facey is my guest. | ||
He's an independent journalist, a real independent journalist, a real regular guy with a phone in his pocket. | ||
You know, just Doing what he does, just going and observing things, going where he's not supposed to go and getting images that the mainstream media doesn't want broadcast. | ||
This is the type of journalism that we have to celebrate. | ||
We love celebrating here on InfoWars. | ||
We encourage more of, as long as it's legal, as long as it's within the First Amendment, as long as all you're doing is exposing the lies of the left. | ||
We need more people like Henry Facey at InfoUncensored on X. | ||
And again, you know, it's just, it's such a wonderful thing. | ||
And I don't, I don't take any credit for this or anything, but it's amazing to have a platform given to me by Alex Jones that I can then share with people like Henry Facey or Anthony from Muckraker. | ||
There's a, there's a new report on him. | ||
These guys who just, they're just doing it. | ||
No approval, no institutional support, just going out and being independent journalist and capturing the stories that, that changed the world. | ||
And one of the most fun parts about it is watching Their reports get better and better as as yours have again. | ||
We talked about a little bit at the beginning, but it's just it's fun to see, you know, start off to sort of a wild video uncut unedited. | ||
You're running through these migrants and you're being chased by security, you know, transition to the latest one where you're laying out exactly where you are, who's the who, what, when, where it's it's. | ||
It's very nice. | ||
I mean, this is what InfoWars is all about, right, Henry? | ||
It's about regular people becoming warriors on the battlefield of the mind in America and using the technology we have access to. | ||
The free editing software, X, I mean, you can do this. | ||
Everybody listening to my voice can do this right now. | ||
And you can change the world. | ||
What are some words of encouragement or advice that you would have for people that might want to follow the path you're taking and become independent journalists themselves? | ||
unidentified
|
That's a phenomenal question, honestly. | |
That's my favorite question yet, by far. | ||
It's interesting. | ||
I would say the best thing to do is to absorb the creator block. | ||
It's like a writer's block, but to just take it in and let it happen. | ||
And then kind of find your way out of it. | ||
You know, I've really, I've really had a lot of trouble getting through that creator's block. | ||
Admittedly, that's been part of it, but it's to get the footage that you know, you need in the can and then do the writer's block thing. | ||
Like it's an exercise, not like it's a problem or something or something that you can't get past. | ||
Um, and that's the only way I can treat it to be honest, because I've been shadow banned on X. | ||
Before multiple times, I've documented it. | ||
Not Elon's fault. | ||
Elon's been amazing. | ||
But the platform, you know, to set in probably some of the sentiment of this, I understand very well. | ||
This is destructive. | ||
It's destructive. | ||
TikTok has done the same thing. | ||
And the only thing I could say is if people walk into these roadblocks, just understand that they're doing something right. | ||
And eventually, you know, the people that are amazing, like Harrison Smith at ADM Central with the American Journal, is going to destroy this. | ||
I mean, these people don't know how to handle this, Harrison. | ||
They don't. | ||
They really honestly freak out. | ||
And it gets to a point where you'll see some people, I'm not going to say I'm like the barometer, but some people are going to avoid me. | ||
Right. | ||
Right. | ||
Well, and we've seen the same thing. | ||
I've talked to Matt Baker about this quite a bit. | ||
He got this leaked video and we tried to make as big of a deal out of it as we could. | ||
It's picked up some traction since then, but I know he put so much work into it. | ||
I'm sort of disappointed that it didn't go super viral, that it didn't make it to Tucker Carlson. | ||
He had a little bit of disappointment because what he was uncovering was so big and he put so much work into it. | ||
And you know, you just but you just desperately want to get out there. | ||
I'm sure you've experienced similar stuff where you put so much work in, you've risked your physical health, you go out of your way, you're not just talking or editing, you're actually going out on the road capturing footage. | ||
It must be frustrating to not, you know, have an immediate response to this. | ||
And part of that is obviously because of censorship. | ||
But you've got to stay the course and know that the people paying attention are so thankful for, you know, what you do, and you know, what you're able to accomplish. | ||
And I think if you stick with it, You'll have success in a very huge way. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I just think it's true and this is what we need because again we hear about the migrant crisis when a girl gets raped in Central Park or when a girl gets murdered jogging in Georgia. | ||
But the sort of quotidian, the daily, the sort of casual effects of the migrant crisis are totally hidden, and that's what you're exposing. | ||
And when you really dig into it, the money being spent, the abuses being allowed, the Laws being broken. | ||
It is horrific what's going on here. | ||
And you're helping to capture it. | ||
Of course, one of the things I'm referencing is this migrant arrested in broad daylight rape of 13-year-old girl in New York Park. | ||
At knife point, this guy had been deported two years ago, but wandered right back across the border. | ||
And now, you know, some young girl is... | ||
Well, her life has changed forever because of it. | ||
Biden's HHS releases 400,000 illegal migrant minors into the U.S., mostly teen males with no oversight at all. | ||
Okay. | ||
Ecuadorian man arrested. | ||
This is that same rapist. | ||
Speaking of Muck Raker. | ||
They are actually trying to track down some of the 85,000 migrant children who vanished under the Biden administration's first term. | ||
And one of the places that they have tracked these children to is now just an abandoned, broken down house. | ||
So it's like, they're like, yes, we sent them to live here. | ||
And then you go there and it's just a, it's just like a pile of wood. | ||
It's like not even a house anymore. | ||
So, I mean, this is, this is, Huge. | ||
I mean, what's happening here has to be the biggest issue in America right now. | ||
I mean, is there anything else that rises to the level of, you know, national threat in the migrant crisis right now? | ||
unidentified
|
You know, people have suggested looming civil wars. | |
Obviously, I'm not even going to really... I don't even think that's a possibility. | ||
And a world war is far more likely Uh, but if you're talking about the United States of America, a hundred percent, this is the number one issue, 100%. | ||
And again, I am a little biased. | ||
So people will say, well, you're doing all this. | ||
So that's why you say that kind of, but this is really the biggest thing you mentioned. | ||
These, these women are, you know, and it's almost hard to talk about. | ||
These women are running on hiking trails. | ||
Okay. | ||
And these animals hide out behind a tree. | ||
Okay. | ||
They see this woman and they grab her like an animal. | ||
Right. | ||
unidentified
|
And they rape her and kill her mercilessly. | |
These are animals. | ||
Animals. | ||
They need to be put down. | ||
Right. | ||
That sentence. | ||
And people don't understand that. | ||
Now, if I'm talking about every migrant in that situation, that would be a little bit over the top, but I'm not, pretending, and I'm not going to be like the left, and pretend like there's not these enormous issues. | ||
And I mean, it's happening regularly. | ||
How are we going to have this happen? | ||
Is this going to happen every single day? | ||
And then people are just going to say, you know what? | ||
It is a big deal. | ||
And yeah, Anthony is exposing there's properties. | ||
You've got properties that are out of order in Massachusetts. | ||
I have video of it. | ||
I haven't even released it. | ||
Okay. | ||
That they have rooms and on the room, they're saying this is totally out of order and they're putting families inside of these things. | ||
So they're getting used. | ||
And you got to understand too, if it's $5,400, which you know very well, but it's $5,400 a month. | ||
$5,400 a month. | ||
How are these people ever going to be able to pay back the debt that they've incurred for the system? | ||
Oh, it'll, it'll never happen. | ||
And when you think about, I mean, as you pointed out, you think about a mortgage, that would be that much money. | ||
I mean, that's what 70 plus thousand dollars a year. | ||
You know, you're talking about a six room mansion on Lake Austin for that type of money, but they're getting a single hotel room. | ||
It's a total scam. | ||
And I would almost understand it if it was like, hey, look, all these people are coming in. | ||
We're just giving them bare basics, right? | ||
They get a piece of bread and a hunk of cheese and a tent. | ||
It's like, OK, but they're getting their laundry service. | ||
They're getting cleaning service. | ||
It's like we're rolling out the red carpet for these people. | ||
We've got veterans on the street. | ||
We've got a fentanyl crisis. | ||
It is Obscene. | ||
It is absolutely treasonous that not only are we spending this much money on foreign colonization within our own country, but that we're actively bringing these people in and offering them paths to citizenship. | ||
It is open treason. | ||
And what you're doing is exposing sort of just the internal operations that are going on there. | ||
What's coming up next for you? | ||
Because we're about to go to break here, but I know I want people to go to follow you on X at info uncensored. | ||
What are they going to find there? | ||
What do you got coming up for us? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, only hard-hitting. | |
And I'm going to be going probably, uh, you know, I was asked this question by a group independently on my personal cell phone a couple months ago. | ||
And I, by the way, just for the record, I know probably somebody will get back to them eventually. | ||
I wish we worked together. | ||
We should have worked together. | ||
It would have been great, but whatever, you know, things don't always work out because it was just an optics problem. | ||
But, Just going back on it, I have to say that it's going to be hard hitting. | ||
I already told them I'm going up to the border in Vermont. | ||
I'm going to be exposing things in Maine. | ||
I'm going to be trying my absolute best to continue this process. | ||
But beyond that, I think we also have to talk about stratospheric aerosol injections. | ||
I think we need to talk about The big issues that are hitting America here. | ||
And they're coming at us from every direction. | ||
I know it doesn't end. | ||
Henry Facey, incredible work at Info Uncensored on X. Go follow him, support him. | ||
This is what we need. | ||
We need independent reporters getting the truth out there in a way that only he does. | ||
unidentified
|
The world is going into martial law. | |
The definition in Black's Law Dictionary is the proper definition under U.S. | ||
law for martial law. | ||
Martial law, which is built upon no settled principles But as entirely arbitrary in its decisions, is in truth and reality no law, but something indulged rather than allowed as a law. | ||
The necessity of order and discipline in an army is the only thing which can give it countenance, and therefore it ought not be permitted in time of peace, When the king's courts are open for all persons to receive justice, according to the laws of the land. | ||
Marion Webster, the law administered by military force that is invoked by a government in emergency when the civilian law enforcement agencies are unable to maintain public order and safety. | ||
Wikipedia. | ||
The imposition of direct military control over normal civilian functions by government, especially in response to a temporary emergency such as invasion or major disaster or in an occupied territory. | ||
And it's the latter. | ||
We're being occupied by the crisis. | ||
Oh, they just absolutely love to hurt innocents. | ||
They just rub their hands together. | ||
To break down civilization, to destroy families, to defile everything they can, and to deceive and to mislead, to build their own universe of fraud. | ||
This is the compendium of their abomination, desolation, and the open season on the truth, open season on the president, open season on loyal, decent, hardworking, honorable folks. | ||
Open season because the trash knows it's being taken out. | ||
And so the trash is fighting for its political, cultural, and spiritual life. | ||
And its life is culturally ruling us. | ||
Whole cacophonies, whole lines of these carrion crows, these buzzards, these vultures, these rotten flesh eaters. | ||
They sit up there and all crow and cackle in chorus. | ||
That we're bad and we're fake and we're evil. | ||
When you judge a tree by its fruits, all we deliver is the news before it's ever forced out. | ||
All we deliver is the cutting edge. | ||
All we deliver is danger to them. | ||
All we deliver is the reality of people that aren't intimidated and aren't lying down and aren't taking their crap anymore. | ||
And you've got to go out with your permission slip that you're going that you'll get from Walmart or Target and then you'll drive in and the police will check you at a checkpoint and then you'll go in wearing your mask and you'll get your food once a week when you're allowed out of your house and you will go home or you will face six months in jail. | ||
Criminals, armed robbers, rapists, they're all being let out of jail by the tens of thousands a day now. | ||
The homeless are exempt in New York and in California. | ||
And the migrants and homeless in Europe. | ||
The Islamics, they're all exempt. | ||
Sweden's banned all air travel in and out of the country, except for Soros UN-funded aircraft that land multiple times daily from the Middle East and North Africa, bringing in military-age men. | ||
So the criminals can run around wild. | ||
The homeless can run around wild. | ||
The illegal aliens can run around wild. | ||
The borders can pretty much still be open. | ||
Old anchormen, you see, don't fade away. | ||
They just keep coming back for more. | ||
Stay in your house, you dirty, stinking American. | ||
unidentified
|
Old anchorman, you see, don't fade away. | |
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That is the latest from John Bowne. | ||
Now, we recorded an interview yesterday evening. | ||
It was the only time that we could do it with Professor Peter St. Ambrose. | ||
Onge, and he's an economist with a breadth of knowledge that covers everything that we talk about here on InfoWars. | ||
So we're going to play that video for you here in this hour. | ||
It'll take up the whole hour, so enjoy it. | ||
It's just chock full of incredible information. | ||
And of course, follow us at InfoWars. | ||
Support us at InfoWarsStore. | ||
You can follow me on Twitter at Harrison H. Smith. | ||
Follow our guests as well. | ||
And I hope you enjoyed the conversation we had with Peter St. | ||
- Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen, this is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Very happy to be welcoming my guest, Peter St. | ||
Onge. | ||
You can follow him at profstonge, that's P-R-O-F-S-T-O-N-G-E, on X. He does daily videos on economics and freedom, and he also has the The honor of being my dad's favorite economist. | ||
He's always sending me your videos, so I'm happy, and I know he's happy as well, that I am welcoming you to the show. | ||
Welcome to the show, Mr. Saint-Ange. | ||
Thank you, and your dad has astoundingly good taste, so well done. | ||
He does, although I totally agree with him, because actually we were discussing right before coming on air, The economy as a concept, the whole thing just baffles me. | ||
And I'm not shy about this. | ||
It's all black magic witchcraft. | ||
It's like a casino with rules that I don't understand and don't want any part of. | ||
But I get that it's an important thing that I probably should know about. | ||
But why I love your videos is because I can actually understand them and you break things down in a very comprehensible sort of way. | ||
So... | ||
Tell me, what is the state of the economy right now? | ||
If you can break it down into a simple answer, good, bad, how's the economy these days? | ||
Yeah, so in real simple terms, we're in the late stage, meaning that we are coming into a recession. | ||
That should not be the case. | ||
The economy was doing fantastic under Trump. | ||
They torpedoed it, of course, with the lockdowns. | ||
And then Joe Biden has turned what should have been an amazing rebound, right? | ||
Like we were pushing down in the spring and the economy should have just popped right back up after they got rid of those stupid lockdowns. | ||
But instead, Joe Biden has dragged it into this Like, plus or minus zero. | ||
It's actually a lot like what happened after the 2008 financial crisis, where we had like two or three years where just the economy was way, way slower than it should have been. | ||
And of course, the reason is because they're spending ungodly amounts of money, wasting it on, you know, government graft, on war in Ukraine or wherever it is this week. | ||
The migrants just, you know, this endless stream green, what is it, green energy. | ||
Just this endless stream of any billionaire who's got a Rolodex to donate is getting billions and none of this is trickling down to the actual American people who pay for it all. | ||
So bottom line, We're kind of where you know we're looking for the recession. | ||
The big debate is is going to be a big one or a small one is going to come in three months or nine months. | ||
But we've already really kind of queued up all the pins for that with the sort of boom bust on inflation that we had over the past couple of years. | ||
Right. | ||
So you had almost double digit inflation. | ||
The Fed jacked up interest rates in order to try to choke that off. | ||
They could have choked it off by just reducing government spending, of course, but instead, no, they jacked up interest rates and they try to choke off the private economy and try to get people to stop spending. | ||
That's really where we are. | ||
And, you know, in 100 years of Fed history, they repeat the exact same thing over and over. | ||
They pump out the easy money, they jack up the rates to cut off the inflation, and then we get a recession. | ||
So boom, boom, every single time. | ||
So that's really where we are right now. | ||
Well, and of course it's always strange because when I go to the store, I'm paying a heck of a lot more than I used to. | ||
Everything's more expensive. | ||
We see that just in our daily life. | ||
Yet every time I turn on the leftist, the mainstream media, They're telling me how great the economy is and there's this just massive disconnect I think between the reality of the situation and the perception or the desired perception what what's being told to us is obviously not reflected in our own personal life and especially when it comes to jobs they they brag a lot about jobs obviously they're taking credit for just allowing us to work again after the lockdown and we get that but then when you look into the details of the | ||
Yeah, and you hit the nail on the head, really. | ||
full-time jobs, while a massive increase in part-time jobs. | ||
And you see a massive decrease in the number of jobs going to Americans born in America and a massive increase in the number of jobs that are going to foreigners. | ||
What is the perception versus the reality of the economy right now, especially when it comes to jobs? | ||
Yeah, and you hit the nail on the head, really. | ||
Those are the two most important numbers when it comes to the economy are going to be jobs and inflation. | ||
And so that's really where they're putting all their gaslighting effort into. | ||
And when you break those down, you know, starting with inflation is probably the simpler the two here. | ||
The big debate is what exactly is the inflation rate? | ||
And, you know, government statistics might say it's something like 20, 25 percent. | ||
Since Biden came in, but you know, people, I mean, they have the receipts like literally, right? | ||
People post these receipts online where they'll show what they used to buy before the pandemic, what they buy now. | ||
You got a lot of families who buy essentially the same things, fish sticks, apples, whatever. | ||
And those prices are like 50 or a hundred percent higher. | ||
You can look at menu prices at McDonald's and there again, you're looking at 35, 50% depending on the chain. | ||
Nothing is 25%. | ||
You know, housing has gone up like 40 percent. | ||
Everything across the board. | ||
When you actually look at the receipts that people are holding in their hands, you know, these are not fake receipts. | ||
People are not photoshopping them over at, you know, Five Guys. | ||
And so that's the first question. | ||
The reason that matters is that if inflation is a lot higher than we think, If it's 35% and not 25%, that's not just a question of, haha, I caught you guys in a lie. | ||
That means that we are dramatically poorer than we were. | ||
Because everything gets adjusted for inflation. | ||
So if your income is $100,000 today and it's going to be $110,000 tomorrow, but inflation went up 50%, you got a massive cut. | ||
You probably can't afford vacations. | ||
You probably have to sell your car and go ride a bicycle now, right? | ||
You are in bad shape. | ||
And so that's the first problem is what the heck is inflation, right? | ||
Government keeps the main statistics. | ||
You might ask why we trust government statistics on, you know, like when Philip Morris tells us about the health benefits of smoking, we laugh them out of the room, right? | ||
When government tells them how they're doing, They're sitting there grading themselves. | ||
They're like, you know, after careful consideration, I found that we've done an amazing job. | ||
At some point, you don't believe the jokers. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
So that's inflation. | ||
That's the first question. | ||
If inflation is higher, then, you know, yeah, that explains a lot of the misery in the polls. | ||
The next question is the jobs. | ||
And there, it's just dreadful, right? | ||
You break that down. | ||
You've got millions of Americans who dropped out of the labor force during COVID. | ||
Some of them retired early. | ||
Some of them were on government benefits. | ||
Government welfare went up about $800 billion. | ||
That's about 30% during COVID. | ||
Because for a while there was no questions asked, right? | ||
Hey, you want government money? | ||
That's fine. | ||
We're just going to give it to you. | ||
We'll try to figure out whether you qualify later. | ||
Once you get people in on that, they end up getting grandfathered in, right? | ||
So you have millions of people now who are on government benefits. | ||
There is a raft of research that once you go on government benefits, you stay there. | ||
Right. | ||
You have no will to work anymore. | ||
You get in Fed, you get in the government cheese, good enough, you play Xbox all day. | ||
So we got all these people dropped out. | ||
When you add those people back in, because those people don't have jobs, they're just not being counted because they're not looking for work anymore. | ||
That's what the unemployment rate measures is. | ||
Are you looking for work? | ||
If you're not looking for work because you're getting government benefits or because you're strung out on fentanyl on the street, you are not counted as unemployed, right? | ||
So when you add those people back in, you're looking at a six and a half to seven percent unemployment rate. | ||
That's point one. | ||
That's typical of early recession, right? | ||
That's like right before the 2008 recession. | ||
That's about where we were. | ||
That's point one. | ||
Point two, as you mentioned, it's the part-time jobs. | ||
It's the migrants. | ||
The overwhelmingly, the amazing job growth that we're seeing, it's either going to what the Wall Street Journal called the government industrial complex. | ||
I'm sorry, they called it the welfare industrial complex. | ||
Kudos to Wall Street Journal for actually using strong language for once. | ||
Welfare industrial complex. | ||
That means this, these millions, you know, it's not just government workers. | ||
It's all these charities that get government grants to take care of voters. | ||
Right. | ||
Take care of new voters for the left. | ||
And so, you know, a lot of the jobs happened in there. | ||
Wall Street Journal, I think, estimated about half of the new jobs were actually welfare administration, which, of course, the rest of us pay for. | ||
And then on top of that, now you've got this explosion in part-time jobs, which that's typically what you see when people are in dire straits, right? | ||
People don't take second jobs for the fun of it, you know, because they have too many evenings free, okay? | ||
They take them because they're in financial trouble. | ||
So you've got millions of part-time jobs, and so actually a lot of that job growth is part-time. | ||
In other words, that's not a good thing, that's a bad thing. | ||
And then the third part of it, as you mentioned, is almost all of the jobs are going to migrants. | ||
They're not going to native-born Americans. | ||
This is something I've talked about several times in the videos. | ||
When you bring migrants into the country, you are not solving a labor shortage. | ||
Migrants come with their own labor shortage. | ||
Uh, and you know, as sort of a mental test to this, all right, if we annexed Canada, they have a weak military, we could do it in like a week, right? | ||
If we annex Canada, we are not going to have 40 million spare workers looking for work. | ||
They already do stuff. | ||
You know, they're dentists, they work at restaurants, they are architects, whatever they are. | ||
When you bring 10 million migrants in, they bring their own labor shortage with them. | ||
They gotta go to the dentist, they get their hair cut, they get their car fixed, they gotta get their dishwasher installed. | ||
I mean, across the board, migrants do not solve any labor shortage. | ||
This is a complete myth. | ||
What they will do is they will lower the wages, solve the labor shortage, in whatever job they're doing. | ||
So if you import a bunch of people who end up becoming janitors or fruit pickers, then the wages will go down in fruit picking. | ||
You will have solved the labor shortage in fruit picking. | ||
You would have created labor shortages in dentists and hospitals and everything else across the board. | ||
So if we're bringing in 10 million people, they're statistically going to bring something like 6 million jobs with them. | ||
That's not jobs they're contributing to the economy, that's because they're using up those jobs themselves. | ||
And so that's really where we are now, is that the economy, it's almost like we annexed Canada a third of Canada, but instead of annexing Canada, we just brought them in through the southern border one by one. | ||
So these people are not solving labor shortages, but what it means statistically is that it looks like our economy is creating jobs when all we're doing is backfilling on all these immigrants who snuck in over the border. | ||
Right. | ||
And there's been obviously America's not alone in this. | ||
In Europe recently, there's been a couple articles coming out going, hey, you know, all these migrants we brought in are sensibly to boost our economy or to fill our pensions. | ||
They're all going on welfare and they're costing us more than they're bringing in. | ||
So, you know, it seems kind of crazy to me. | ||
You've got this economic justification for bringing in millions of people. | ||
They make the economy worse and that they keep bringing in millions of people. | ||
Am I missing something here? | ||
Or is this all a giant scam? | ||
Yeah, it's a scam. | ||
You know, you've got, as pretty much always happens, you've got this union of left-wing activists and donors, right? | ||
So bringing in all these immigrants, it does lower wages for blue collar workers. | ||
I mean, they go into the gutter, right? | ||
You know, if you've got Maybe you've got an American who's happy to mow lawns at $20 an hour, but he's not going to do it for $10. | ||
But you get an immigrant in, and now suddenly you can get lawns mowed for $10. | ||
So if you're a lawn mowing company, or more specifically, if you're big agriculture, or a lot of factories, they absolutely love this, right? | ||
They push on Republicans and Democrats to import more cheap labor. | ||
Now they, those companies, they don't have to pay for the welfare. | ||
Their kids aren't going to school. | ||
The CEO of Smithfield Meats, his kid's not going to school with illegal immigrant kids. | ||
They don't suffer any of the social consequences. | ||
In fact, they can get their lawns mowed cheap. | ||
They can get cheap nannies now. | ||
So these guys absolutely love it. | ||
And of course, the Democrats are no dummies. | ||
They're very, very good at figuring out how to sneak more power into their meal. | ||
And so they're more than happy to play ball. | ||
And then, you know, the Republicans, as always, they'll they'll chase the donor dollars. | ||
So they don't put up a fight against any of this, just like they don't put up a fight on Ukraine war. | ||
Right. | ||
Right, and then there's things like the Tent Program. | ||
I'm not sure if you're familiar with this, but, you know, you've got all these massive corporations that are like, oh, you know, if you're an illegal immigrant, we'll give you, you know, legal representation, and we'll give you a place to live, and we'll provide you a job. | ||
And it's like, okay, you're giving them a place to live, you're providing them a lawyer, you're giving them all this stuff. | ||
How much are you saving on bringing in illegal immigrants? | ||
Because you know they're not making these decisions out of the goodness of their heart. | ||
I mean they're making a dollar decision and they find it's cheaper to bring in an illegal immigrant, provide them with all this extra stuff, than it would be just to hire an American. | ||
So clearly this is a giant graft going on here and obviously the amount they save by hiring illegal aliens must be huge because they're offering all of these extra things on top of it. | ||
Yeah, for sure. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
So instead of paying the American 20, they pay the illegal 12. | ||
They give them rather foreign benefits and then they throw 50 or $500 on to the taxpayer. | ||
And they say, here, you go take care of, you know, they bring in their sick parents or, you know, on dialysis. | ||
I mean, it's just absolutely endless. | ||
And, you know, one of the tactics that the left plays is that they try to conflate Illegals and legal migrants. | ||
Legal migrants, people who actually pass the screening. | ||
They pass security checks, criminal checks. | ||
We have systems to make sure that they have some skills. | ||
Maybe they have a college degree. | ||
Those people are solid gold. | ||
They're fantastic, economically. | ||
True, they vote like crap. | ||
A lot of them vote socialist. | ||
But economically, they're pure gold. | ||
They start businesses, they have higher rates of entrepreneurship, lower rates of criminality. | ||
Legal immigrants are wonderful economically. | ||
Illegals are a completely different story because they are by definition the people who would not have passed the quality standards. | ||
Either they have a criminal record, they have absolutely garbage human capital, maybe they're illiterate. | ||
I mean, what kind of taxes are you going to pay if you're an illiterate who doesn't speak English? | ||
You're going to make like eight bucks an hour your entire life. | ||
You don't pay taxes if you make eight bucks an hour. | ||
We have a progressive tax system. | ||
You actually get money back. | ||
It's called the EITC. | ||
So like every fifth or every dollar you earn, if you're making that low, every dollar you earn, you get another 50 cents back from taxpayer. | ||
These guys are just pure, absolute cost. | ||
The idea that, you know, you've got like Neurologists sneaking across the border. | ||
It's just pure fiction. | ||
But that's the game they play is that they take the fact that legal immigrants are pretty incredible and then they try to sprinkle all the illegals in there, stuff them in and say, look, they're immigrants. | ||
Well, yeah, there is a world of difference between the two. | ||
Yeah and it's it it's funny that I mean and I mean now it might be a little bit different though because I've seen some uh some uh what is it tiktok streamers or some uh twitch streamers that are coming across the border so we're getting all sorts of types of uh migrants coming in these days but you know this is another thing just to to to reference my dad again he's been drilling this into me since uh I was a kid the idea of think about How much is supported by this tiny population of people that actually produce things in America? | ||
You've got not just the welfare state, but all of the immigration, all of the foreign aid that goes out, then the government contractors and just the sheer weight of the government employees with millions upon millions of people in the federal government, in the state government, in the local government. | ||
And when you really think about it, it's like, okay, so Is 10% of America actually productive in paying for the rest of the 90? | ||
Is it 5%? | ||
Is it 15%? | ||
I mean, what percentage of Americans are actually producing goods and how is it enough to pay for the rest of us? | ||
Again, it just doesn't make any sense to me. | ||
Yeah, it's absolutely astounding. | ||
And you know, you generally don't see it unless you work your butt off and actually hit some success. | ||
And holy moly, the taxes come for you. | ||
It is something astounding. | ||
And really, they've created a system where it is hard to succeed, and it's very, very easy to fail. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
If you fail, you are like a hero, man. | ||
I mean, it's like you walk out on stage and everybody applauds you. | ||
You know, good job. | ||
You've, you know, been in prison half your life, never held down a job. | ||
You're an addict. | ||
Brave and stunning. | ||
I mean, it is an upside down culture, because if you're doing that, you are encouraging people to fail. | ||
Right. | ||
Our system what it should be doing is it should be uncomfortable to fail. | ||
There should be some built in incentive to actually succeed. | ||
Take care of your body to be productive to serve everybody else in your community by producing a good or service that they're actually happy to pay for. | ||
All these things should be encouraged. | ||
And instead, because of the political incentives involved, the system is almost set up to try to get you to fail. | ||
It'll keep throwing roadblocks into your path until you fail. | ||
Once you fail, it'll pick you up and love you. | ||
And you know, the sad thing is that even if you succeed, I feel like often, I mean, how rare is it that a company is actually created from the ground up and succeeds on its own and stands on its own and remains an independent company? | ||
It seems like most of the time it just gets snatched up by, you know, some bigger firm or BlackRock or something else. | ||
And just gets folded into sort of the corporate world as it stands already. | ||
So not a lot of disruption going on here. | ||
And it seems to me, tell me if I'm wrong here, we've got clips of people like Klaus Schwab, there's actually a clip of Klaus Schwab, he's on the stage with Joe Biden, and he says, in no uncertain terms, he says, the greatest barrier to the implementation of a false industrial revolution, which is of course, human slavery worldwide, planetary enslavement, He says the biggest impediment is the middle class. | ||
The middle class won't come along with us. | ||
And it seems like everything I'm seeing out of the economy is deliberately designed to destroy the middle class and either benefit the people at the very top or keep the people at the very bottom in their place and increase their ranks by hurting the rest of the middle class into them. | ||
I mean, is it deliberate or is it an accident that the middle class seems to be getting the brunt of all of this and is really the most disadvantaged out of anybody at this point? | ||
Yeah, so that's been the communist playbook for 100 years, more than 100 years. | ||
They always attack the bourgeoisie. | ||
The bourgeoisie are their just permanent enemy. | ||
And the bourgeoisie means the middle class. | ||
And the issue that they have with the bourgeoisie is that, you know, it's very easy to direct public anger at the rich, right? | ||
The rich, you know, they got the, you know, the yachts and the limousines and all that, okay? | ||
That's great. | ||
So they love the rich because the rich are their marketing department, right? | ||
That's how they can really get people riled up. | ||
They love the poor because, and this is part of the reason why they love you when you fail, because now you have graduated to a foot soldier of the revolution. | ||
Now you are angry. | ||
So they love the poor because they're useful idiots, right? | ||
They're going to end up voting for starvation, but they're relatively easy to get there. | ||
The bourgeoisie are the ones who are in the way, the middle class. | ||
Because they like their lives just the way it is, right? | ||
They want to take care of their lawn. | ||
They want to have a nice house with flowers out front. | ||
They want to, you know, take their kids, walk their kids to school in a safe neighborhood. | ||
They want Good things in life. | ||
And so that is always the enemy that's been the case ever since the beginning of communism. | ||
And unfortunately, yes, the, you know, whatever you call it, the sort of deep state Borg, I want to say Democrats, but it's not only the Democrats. | ||
So it's really kind of a uniparty. | ||
The uniparty is pursuing strategies that would be consistent with, you know, an economic version of a communist insurrection. | ||
Yeah, it seems fairly obvious to me. | ||
I wonder how people don't recognize this more. | ||
Obviously you see it, but you know, when you think about the average person, I mean, aren't they seeing their retirement being eaten away by inflation? | ||
Aren't they, you know, seeing the gains that they've made being taken from them? | ||
And I mean, is America just sleepwalking at this point? | ||
Do you think people recognize where things are going? | ||
I mean, How long do you think this can go on? | ||
Because I get the feeling anytime I do try to look at the economics, I don't understand it all the time, but I do give it my best shot, and it always seems like we're always teetering on the edge. | ||
The bubble's always about to burst. | ||
It always seems like it's about to come down, and yet it doesn't. | ||
I mean, how close are we to a total collapse or a loss of confidence or the dollar not being the reserve currency? | ||
You know, how close are we to disaster right now in terms of the middle class? | ||
Yeah, so I think what happens, like the reason why a lot of people don't understand what's happening, or anyway, why they're not angry about what's happening, is really because of the press. | ||
The media had always been pretty deeply left-leaning, but they sort of threw off the mask. | ||
All right, folks, this is our interview with Peter St. | ||
Onge, PhD at Prof. St. | ||
Onge on X. Follow him there. | ||
More on the other side. | ||
The conversation with Peter St. | ||
Onge continues. | ||
in about 90 seconds. | ||
Stay with us. | ||
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...always been pretty deeply left-leaning, but they sort of threw off the mask starting around 2008 under Obama, and they just said, you know what? | ||
Screw it. | ||
We're just going to go 100%. | ||
And I think the reason they did that was because of the Internet. | ||
They were losing audience. | ||
You know, CNN was getting destroyed in terms of audience because they were kind of taking this middle line. | ||
And so really, the entire corporate media, they decided that they had to choose a side. | ||
And of course, they chose the left because, you know, they were left to begin with. | ||
And, you know, the good news on that is that they've so obviously thrown off the mask this point that many more people are waking up. | ||
Right. | ||
So 20 years ago, if you said that the American media like New York Times and, you know, Wall Street Journal, if you said that these guys were part of this uniparty that's at war with the people, you would've been a crazy person. | ||
Like almost nobody would have agreed with you. | ||
Maybe 5, 10 percent. | ||
Americans at this point, you're talking like 40 or 50 percent of people who agree with you. | ||
So that's the good news is that they have thrown off the mask. | ||
The bad news, however, is that it takes a while for a lot of people to wake up. | ||
And so in the meantime, they are essentially like a drone army who can just be directed at will to the five or the two minute hate. | ||
So we're still kind of working through that. | ||
And, you know, maybe the media can still buy the uniparty another election. | ||
We'll see on this upcoming one. | ||
I mean, it should not be nearly as close as it is. | ||
We can debate whether Trump is going to win or lose. | ||
But the point is that it shouldn't even be a contest. | ||
The only reason it's a contest is because of that. | ||
That you know 100 million strong drone army that they've still got going from the sort of legacy trust that have been put in the media over generations. | ||
In terms of the second question when is it going to collapse. | ||
You know the big question there is really when do people understand what's happening. | ||
The thing is things don't come to a head. | ||
Because they have to. | ||
They come to a head because people rise up and reject what's happening. | ||
You know if we look at one of my favorite examples is the European debt crisis back in 20. | ||
I think it was 11 or 12. | ||
And that was when Greece was going to default on their debt and a whole bunch of European countries got into trouble. | ||
And what I think was interesting back then is that at that time, everybody was talking like, you know, Greece is just on the verge of total collapse, going to be anarchy. | ||
OK, but the amount of debt interest coming out of Greece at the peak of its crisis as a percent of GDP, it was less than was coming out of the US at the time. | ||
In other words, it was it was not that Greece was, you know, had to go into crisis. | ||
Rather, what had happened was that there was a political entrepreneur who came out and said, hey, I got a great idea, guys. | ||
Let's stiff the Germans because, look, they're rich. | ||
They're greedy. | ||
We don't like them to begin with. | ||
Screw these guys. | ||
OK, that I think is really the model here. | ||
So, you know, we know that the water keeps getting hot. | ||
The frog stays put. | ||
There's some point where the frog jumps. | ||
The question at that point is, if you get A political entrepreneur, then the frog jumps when it's still really warm, right? | ||
If you don't, if you don't get that political entrepreneur, in other words, maybe, you know, you've got censorship or you don't have free speech. | ||
So if you choke off those political entrepreneurs, then the frog will stay put longer. | ||
He will eventually boil. | ||
But what you get at the end of that is a very, very ugly process, probably with a lot of bloodshed. | ||
So that I think is really the question. | ||
If we have free speech, Then, like we had perfect free speech right now, right? | ||
If we just sort of imagine we had a level playing field, Google wasn't playing with the search results and the mainstream media was giving equal consideration, all this, right? | ||
If we had a world like that, then starting today, then obviously Trump would win. | ||
You would have, you know, the, the Democrats would, would have to, you know, go back to the way they used to be. | ||
So, you know, closer to Bill Clinton and whatever they've become today. | ||
So that, you know, they would, they would, uh, Like Bill Clinton, lest we forget, did put up a border wall. | ||
He put a lot of money into the border. | ||
He cut spending. | ||
He played ball with Newt Gingrich, right? | ||
The Democrats would go back to that sort of same party and, you know, sort of the entire centroid would shift a lot more towards the mainstream. | ||
And I think that, you know, we would We could start cutting spending, we could start actually putting in good policies. | ||
So, you know, ironically, the sooner the frog jumps, the less disruption we have, right? | ||
On the other hand, and I guess this is sort of good news, you know, if we do get completely censored, then yes, it's going to take longer, but when it does come, we're going to completely purge the entire system. | ||
I hope we don't get there, because there will be innocents. | ||
And, you know, it won't be like, you know, the number of people died in the 2020 riots. | ||
I mean, it'll be probably a significant number of victims. | ||
So I hope it doesn't take that long. | ||
But that's really the question is, how open is the system to course correction? | ||
And if it's open, then it comes sooner, but it doesn't really look like a Ragnarok. | ||
Right, so we're just sort of putting off the inevitable, and the longer we put it off, the worse the eventual outcome becomes. | ||
That makes perfect sense to me, and again, it's just one of these things where I kind of understand how people could be fooled on the political side, because I'm in this all the time, I'm constantly watching everything, I'm seeing it from all angles. | ||
I have a pretty good view, but I know most people don't have time to do that. | ||
They turn on the evening news, they see it reporting something, they assume it's true. | ||
I get that. | ||
I get that. | ||
But then when it's the economy, it's like, well, this is contradictory to your own observations, your own spending habits, the prices you see at the grocery store. | ||
This is why it baffles me, and it does. | ||
It illustrates the power that the mainstream media has over the minds of people. | ||
If they wanted a panic, they would have one. | ||
And if they want a crisis, they can create one. | ||
If they don't, It just won't happen. | ||
Let me just say, if you're just joining us, Peter St. | ||
Onge is my guest at Prof St. | ||
Onge. | ||
It's P-R-O-F-S-T-O-N-G-E. | ||
PeterStOnge.com and ProfStOnge.com. | ||
He does daily videos on economics and freedom. | ||
He's teaching me about the economy in a way that I can actually understand, which is rare for an economist, which is why I encourage you to go find him. | ||
And I understand you have a book as well, I think you mentioned? | ||
No, I was working on one, tentatively called the Crisis Industrial Complex, and I got caught up in too many other projects. | ||
But I do talk about that a lot in the daily videos, just the idea that You know, traditionally, the relationship that we had with government is that they would, you know, fix the potholes and arrest the bad guys and try to kind of keep things, you know, comfortable for the voters. | ||
And that was kind of the bargain. | ||
So, in other words, they would like head off crises. | ||
And I think that what we've fallen into, really arguably since 1913, World War I, I think, was really the iconic elite crisis, is that government creates these crises because each crisis pays them. | ||
And they actually did it on purpose in World War I. It was called war socialism. | ||
You had all these socialists who wanted to launch their revolution, but they noticed that the middle class, the bourgeoisie, was never going to go for it. | ||
And so they said, well, OK, but if we have this giant war, then we're going to be able to impose war socials. | ||
They're absolutely correct. | ||
That's exactly what happened. | ||
You know, during World War One, for example, if you wanted to start a business selling shovels, you had to get permission from the war planning department who would decide whether, you know, is there already too much competition in the shovel industry? | ||
Is your shovel sufficiently unique? | ||
I mean, literally, it was like the Soviet Union. | ||
Uh, and those guys, unfortunately, you know, it's, it's kind of like an animal gets a taste of human flesh. | ||
And so, you know, you kind of have to put it down. | ||
And, uh, unfortunately those guys got a taste and, you know, they, they came roaring back under the Hoover administration, uh, and then the FDR, uh, administration, those guys had the exact same policy mix Hoover and FDR. | ||
They were essentially, uh, the same president in terms of the economy, uh, and they reimposed it again. | ||
And of course that led to the great depression. | ||
They took a relatively minor stock market crash and spun that sucker up into a world-ending catastrophe. | ||
And what worries me at the moment is that if we look back at that sort of loss of innocence in World War I, that it sort of raised this entire generation of rabid bureaucrats who lusted after totalitarian power. | ||
Well, we just did that, right? | ||
And, you know, the COVID lockdowns were approximately the same length as World War I. So I'm very concerned. | ||
I think right now we're in a pretty dangerous place where these guys are running loose in the government. | ||
You know, the people who were in charge, some of them have retired, but I mean, they haven't been repudiated. | ||
Their accolades are still in charge. | ||
I'm sure that, you know, Fauci's guys are still running the show. | ||
over at NIH, it's really across the board. | ||
All these guys are still in power. | ||
So if we look back to the World War I example, these guys no doubt are sitting there lusting after, dreaming. | ||
unidentified
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They close their eyes and they remember what it felt like. | |
We just forget, right, it was illegal to go to church for a long time there. | ||
That was something that had not happened since 1648, the Peace of Westphalia, all right? | ||
That was not on the bingo card, man. | ||
There was a lot of crazy stuff that happened. | ||
Even in World War I, they wouldn't have dared do something like that. | ||
So I think we are in a very dangerous spot. | ||
Yeah, and oh my God, I mean, so many things you just brought up. | ||
I mean, 1913, the Fed, income tax, just, you know, not a coincidence that that's right ahead of World War I. And that's the exact argument I've been making for why I think we're headed towards World War III in a quite purposeful way. | ||
I mean, I think the people at the top, if you look at what they're trying to achieve, It's all accelerated by war. | ||
I mean, you want to take over economies? | ||
Start a war. | ||
You want to reorganize entire industries? | ||
Start a war. | ||
You want to surveil people? | ||
Start a war. | ||
You want to censor people? | ||
Well, war is extremely convenient excuse. | ||
You're working for the enemy if you, you know, counteract our statements. | ||
I mean, war seems a very useful, and I think that's amazing, the crisis industrial complex. | ||
That's what it is. | ||
unidentified
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It is. | |
That's what the World Economic Forum is. | ||
They even coined this term polycrisis. | ||
It's a polycrisis coming, where it's crisis upon crisis upon crisis. | ||
Everything's a crisis at this point, and all the crises are interconnected. | ||
It's maddening, and yet it's sort of impossible to resist, right, because they can both launch a fake crisis and convince people to be scared, to take advantage of them, but at the same time, time, they can launch a real, they can actually make a real deadly disease and actually release it. | ||
So you're sort of in this impossible position and it, you know, the fear overrides logic and, and it, you know, makes people willing to do extreme things because they think they're going to die otherwise. | ||
So it's like, how do you confront this? | ||
How do you confront the crisis industrial complex when it's so effective on a human psychological level? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Well, that's why I think that the number one, by far the most important battle right now is free speech because what's absolutely key people like you or me, you know, there are a lot of people, a lot of listeners who are going to be posting on social media, or maybe, you know, you have content channels of your own. | ||
It's just, you know, It is absolutely critically important that you get your version of events out because that is the only way that you can fight them. | ||
You know, so if they start a war on purpose, which they appear to be trying to do in Ukraine, and now they're talking up in China, if they start a war on purpose, The people are going to regard that very, very differently if they think that, say, Joe Biden started the war on purpose versus if they think that it was a Pearl Harbor type. | ||
And of course, I don't. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
I think that was FDR. | ||
But at any rate, the people at the time, right, most Americans thought that it was just out of the blue, Japan hit us, sucker punched us. | ||
Right. | ||
And if they do believe that, if they buy that version, then you get a war, you're going to get a rally around the flag. | ||
You know, George W. Bush had like a 90 percent approval rate for George W. Bush. | ||
Right. | ||
Who's not a naturally charismatic guy. | ||
Love him or hate him. | ||
Because Americans fell, I think correctly, for 9-11. | ||
That we were sucker punched. | ||
So what's absolutely key here is to name, uh, to expose this process so that when the next crisis comes, people don't run to, you know, these fake leaders, um, you know, like save us rather they turn on the fake leaders. | ||
So if you look at what happened in Afghanistan, for example, the Afghan withdrawal that did not boost Mr. Biden. | ||
You know, the various adventures like putting soldiers in Syria during Obama, that did not boost him. | ||
And the reason it didn't is because of the framing. | ||
American people did not think that that was a war that we should have been involved in. | ||
So there was no rally around the flag. | ||
I think it's absolutely critical that free speech, right, we have to have the ability to at least get the alternative version to people so that when they launch these crises, people can You know, instead of fearing the crisis, they can get angry that these bastards caused the crisis in the first place. | ||
Right. | ||
No, I think you're exactly right. | ||
And of course it relates to COVID as well, where now they're acting like, well, we're just now realizing that it may have come from a lab and gee, it looks like these vaccines might not have been as safe and effective, but we all, we all thought they were, but unfortunately you got outlets like InfoWars standing here who at the time were telling everybody what they're just now pretending to learn for the first time. | ||
So, It sort of is impossible for them to keep up the lie when you've got proof of us at the same time telling the truth. | ||
Obviously, you know, we aren't any more informed than they are. | ||
We just are using logic and common sense and paying attention to the things that they call fake news or misinformation, which turn out to be true at the end of the day. | ||
So I think you're exactly right. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
It really is the battlefield. | ||
And if we can get the right information out, we can actually possibly – do you think we could stop the Third World War or do you think we could just minimize its effect? | ||
Because I think you're right. | ||
I think they're trying everything they can to start a Third World War but not look like it's their fault. | ||
Are they going to be able to pull that off, do you think? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I don't know. | |
I mean I think the most likely Third World Wars are going to be with Russia and China. | ||
Both of those governments are very, very aware that the U.S. is trying to goad them into war. | ||
President Xi, who by the way, I absolutely despise the guy. | ||
He's a totalitarian. | ||
I do not like him at all. | ||
But he's smart. | ||
China does use smart people. | ||
It doesn't use – It's not very diverse. | ||
But they absolutely understand what's happening and they are trying to do everything they can to not get the war going. | ||
So that's really going to be the question. | ||
I think in many ways, ironically enough, and I do genuinely despise the CCP, but I think in many ways peace depends on them. | ||
Them being able to navigate this Yes. | ||
this perverse incentive system in the U S where our leaders have an incentive to actually start wars. | ||
It doesn't really matter where the war is. | ||
I mean, if you take Luhansk, right? | ||
Uh, Luhansk and Donetsk and all this in eastern Ukraine. | ||
It is difficult to think of a region that is less important for the average American family. | ||
Like, who the heck cares who run? | ||
I mean, look, both regimes are dictators. | ||
They're both crappy regimes. | ||
Why on earth would the average American care? | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
So if they can gin up World War Three over something like that, they can do it over anywhere. | ||
So I do think it's a danger. | ||
Fortunately, I do think that the other side is aware of this, and so they're trying to sort of dodge the bull. | ||
Yeah, it's such a strange position to be in, because I completely agree with you. | ||
I've got no love for the Chinese Communist Party. | ||
I've got no love for a totalitarian autocrat in the style of Putin. | ||
But at the same time, they haven't even tried to give us a reason to go to war with Russia. | ||
I mean, this is the weird part. | ||
with Iraq, they came up with weapons of mass destruction. | ||
It may have been a total lie. | ||
It may have been totally fabricated from whole cloth, but at least they tried to trick us. | ||
At least they had the courtesy to trick us that time. | ||
This time they're just going, no, Russia's the enemy, and if you disagree, you're the enemy. | ||
And it's just like, you can't even at least try to convince me. | ||
You're just going to dictate this. | ||
Okay. | ||
So it's a bizarre situation to be in, and yet we seem to be driving towards it. | ||
I have the suspicion that there's an economic underpinning to this, that the dollars is headed towards a crash or, you know, their country's moving away from the dollar as the global reserve currency. | ||
I mean, do you think that we're reaching some sort of dead end here economically and to avoid the catastrophe that they've set up, they're going to start a war to try to reorganize everything? | ||
I mean, do you think there's an economic underpinning to this, to the war drums being beaten? | ||
Uh, I think there absolutely is. | ||
I think it's overwhelmingly just political. | ||
When a country goes to war, voters do tend to rally around the flag. | ||
The leader in charge tends to get a boost. | ||
If you take somebody like Winston Churchill, he was a washed up nobody. | ||
He'd screwed up time and time again. | ||
The Gallipoli campaign was just an absolute catastrophe. | ||
It was a meat grinder. | ||
He was a loser. | ||
And he happened to be in the right place at the right time when a war started. | ||
One could argue he had a hand in pushing it to that. | ||
And now, you know, what is he? | ||
He's like the next best thing to a demigod in Britain. | ||
So wars do amazing things. | ||
They're always attractive. | ||
Unfortunately, that sets up a bad incentive. | ||
I think in terms of the economy, the sort of assumption for, I think, about 50 years, more than that, had been that the U.S. | ||
government was trying to protect the dollar, was trying to keep the dollar strong, whether it was the petrodollar or however else, encouraging countries to dollarize and so on. | ||
And I think what's been surprising to me under Biden anyway is that they don't seem to be doing that anymore. | ||
They almost seem to be intentionally gutting the dollar. | ||
For example, this seizing Russia's central bank assets. | ||
We didn't do that during the Cold War. | ||
We had multiple hot wars going on all over the world, including Vietnam, Korea. | ||
We never did anything like that. | ||
The reason that you wouldn't do something like that is that you want your enemies to be dependent on you. | ||
Right. | ||
You don't throw away that leverage because, I mean, what did it get us anyway? | ||
It's backfire. | ||
Yeah, so they did it in order to crash Russia's banks, and ironically enough, our banks collapsed instead. | ||
But at any rate, so that kind of got me thinking that, wait a minute, either these guys don't know what they're doing, which is possible, or they're actually trying to get the dollar. | ||
And recently, Biden's chief economic advisor, the chair of the CEA, He came out and he was actually arguing that we need to dethrone King Dollar. | ||
This is the guy who was famous for the idiot response. | ||
Remember when the guy asked about bonds and he was like, uh, maybe, uh, let me think. | ||
Okay. | ||
I don't actually understand how it works now that I think about it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Bizarre. | ||
Just totally strange. | ||
I mean, you know, kudos for honesty, I gotta say. | ||
But the guy's an idiot. | ||
You know, PhD grade idiot. | ||
Um, but at any rate, yeah, so he was actually arguing for dethroning the dollar. | ||
Now, why would you want to do that? | ||
Because U.S. | ||
manufacturing is uncompetitive, right? | ||
We have a massive trade deficit. | ||
Nobody wants to buy our stuff because it is too expensive for the quality. | ||
Now, how did it get that way? | ||
Because of stupid domestic policy, right? | ||
So we have, you know, green mandates. | ||
We have just mandates across the board. | ||
We got, you know, union requirements. | ||
We got all these things. | ||
that drive the prices up and make our companies uncompetitive. | ||
So one way you could fix that is that you could actually tend to the fields. | ||
You know, you can get rid of the stupid regulations. | ||
You could lower taxes, especially for like small manufacturers, mom and pops, right? | ||
So that's one way you could do it. | ||
And then that would all feed through the components and there's like how Japan or Taiwan does it, for example. | ||
So that's one way to do it. | ||
The other way to do it is you just slash the dollar, okay? | ||
You make the dollar really super cheap, and then now, even though your domestic businesses are crap, and you get all these regulations and, you know, all these, you know, lobbied restrictions put on them, but still your stuff gets cheap just because the dollar is cheap. | ||
So that's kind of the real, you know, quick way to get it done. | ||
Now, of course, what that does do is bankrupt Americans, because that means that everything that we import, including all of our commodities, right, even if you make the commodity here in the US, if the dollar is much weaker, then they're going to be effectively Much more expensive. | ||
And so you end up bankrupting, sort of draining the national wealth away, but you do promote exports in the short run. | ||
That gives you kind of a tissue fire. | ||
You get jobs, you get to say it's a manufacturing renaissance. | ||
Not a manufacturing renaissance for the good reasons, right? | ||
Rather, what you've essentially done is sold your national wealth in order to buy the next couple of elections. | ||
Right, which is what they're doing in a very real way now with the forgiveness of student loans and the draining of the strategic reserve, right, to boost the economy for the short term, but are literally selling out our future in the long term. | ||
Well, my goodness, we've really run the gamut today. | ||
I mean, we've covered practically everything, but we've still just barely scratched the surface. | ||
I'd love to have you on again soon to dig down into some of this stuff. | ||
My guest is Peter St. | ||
Onge at Prof. St. | ||
Onge. | ||
Of course. | ||
ProfStAnge.com, ProfStAnge.com. | ||
He does daily videos on economics and freedom. | ||
Go follow him on X. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us today. | ||
Of course. | ||
Thank you for having me on. | ||
It's been my pleasure. | ||
All right, folks. | ||
That's going to do it for us. | ||
Thank you for joining us here on The American Journal. | ||
This is Harrison Smith signing off. | ||
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