Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
A recent video going viral shows Israel's finance minister saying that the Jewish state must extend into Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia. | |
But he's been saying this for over a year. | ||
Look, the Jordanians, for starters, did not like the statement, but even less the setting of the stage with Smotich giving the statement. | ||
He gave the address on the podium was a map of greater Israel that includes parts of modern-day Jordan and that's what got Amman to blast the statement. | ||
They said that Smotrich's actions constituted an act of reckless incitement as well as a violation of international norms and the peace agreement between Israel and Jordan. | ||
The Deputy Speaker of Jordanian Parliament took it a step further Calling on the Jordanian military to quote, take up arms and saying that all options should be on the table for Jordan given the extremist statements. | ||
Some Israeli soldiers wear the greater Israel patch on their uniforms. | ||
Many Israelis believe it is prophesied by God, and the radical American prophecy Christians agree. | ||
But what I'm saying is I believe eventually our borders will extend from Lebanon to the Great Desert, which is Saudi Arabia, and then from the Mediterranean to the Euphrates. | ||
And who's on the other side of the Euphrates? | ||
It is the Kurds, and the Kurds are our friends. | ||
So we have the Mediterranean behind us, the Kurds in front of us, Lebanon, which really needs the umbrella of protection of Israel. | ||
And then we're going to take, I believe, we're going to take Mecca, Medina and Mount Sinai and purify those places. | ||
You know, it's going to happen. | ||
Ukrainian President Zelensky has said that he wants his country to become a big Israel. | ||
And while young Ukrainians are sacrificed for the U.S. State Department war with Russia, Jewish settlers from Israel are setting up homes in their place. | ||
We are told that Israel is defending themselves from Hamas, but a leaked telegram from Israel states that Hamas served as a useful countergroup against the PLO. In 2019, Benjamin Netanyahu said, anyone who wants to thwart the establishment of a Palestinian state has to support bolstering Hamas and transferring money to Hamas. | ||
The CIA, MI6, Mossad, and their intelligence counterparts have a long history of fostering terrorist groups and using them as the boogeyman to sell non-stop illegal wars in the Middle East. | ||
And do not forget that after 9-11, the United States Department of Defense planned on invading seven countries. | ||
I went downstairs just to say hello to some of the people on the joint staff who used to work for me. | ||
And one of the generals called me and he said, sir, you got to come in. | ||
You got to come in and talk to me a second. | ||
I said, well, you're too busy. He said, no, no. | ||
He says, we've made the decision. | ||
We're going to war with Iraq. | ||
This was on or about the 20th of September. | ||
I said, we're going to war with Iraq. | ||
Why? He said, I don't know. | ||
So I came back to see him a few weeks later, and by that time we were bombing in Afghanistan. | ||
I said, are we still going to war with Iraq? | ||
And he said, oh, it's worse than that. | ||
He said, I just got this down from upstairs, meeting the Secretary of Defense Office today, and he said, this is a memo that describes how we're going to take out seven countries in five years, starting with Iraq and then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and finishing off Iran. | ||
unidentified
|
Israel and the United States continue to bomb Lebanon, murdering countless civilians, shooting young children in the head, and pushing closer to a war with Iran. | |
A war that will inevitably pull Russia into the conflict. | ||
Why this is all happening is not entirely clear. | ||
But the late naval intelligence whistleblower, William Cooper, believed that he knew the answer. | ||
Israel was created as the instrument to bring about the battle of Armageddon and the fulfillment of prophecy. | ||
A war that will be so terrible, where nuclear weapons will be used, so that the American citizens and the other people in the world will get down on their knees and bang for no more war. | ||
And what is the answer to that? | ||
They're going to be told the only way we can guarantee no more war is if we destroy the sovereignty of nations and we come together as one humanity in a one-world government. | ||
Right. Reporting for InfoWars, this is Greg Reese. | ||
It's Monday, October 14th in the year of our Lord 2024. | ||
more. | ||
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to The American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, coming to you live this Monday morning. | ||
It's Columbus Day. | ||
Happy Columbus Day to everybody. | ||
Yes, like Columbus, I too have triumphantly returned from two weeks off because we had a baby. | ||
Everybody's great. Thank you everybody for your well wishes. | ||
Thank you of course to the crew and to Christy Lee and Chase Geiser and Maria Z for filling in for me for the last two weeks. | ||
You know, sometimes when I take a long break, I'm still tuned in the whole time. | ||
And I'm just compiling things so when I get back I've got like a big backlog of stuff that I've wanted to talk about. | ||
But not this time. | ||
Not this time. I wasn't disconnected. | ||
I wasn't doing a lot of thinking, though. | ||
I was doing a lot of chores. | ||
I've been doing chores for the last two weeks is what I've been doing nonstop. | ||
But holy goodness, is there a lot to talk about. | ||
When I left two weeks ago, the storm had just hit the Northeast. | ||
And there started to be some concerns about a lack of FEMA response. | ||
Yeah, that was just, that was two weeks ago. | ||
In case you're wondering what the lifespan of a gigantic, horrifying, deadly scandal is in the modern media landscape, it's two weeks. | ||
It's two weeks, and it's basically gone. | ||
Basically, nobody remembers it. | ||
Nobody's talking about it. | ||
Nobody is being punished for their failures, and we're just moving on. | ||
We're moving on, I guess. | ||
It's pretty amazing. It's pretty amazing. | ||
What can happen in two weeks? | ||
Like, something crazy happened like you're in a coma for two weeks and you wake up and you're like, well, what about the floods in Appalachia? | ||
What happened there? Are their heads rolling at FEMA? Did they get off their butts and actually launch a giant rescue operation? | ||
No? No, nothing. | ||
No, it's just slowly faded from memory and now nobody cares. | ||
Okay, great. Great. | ||
Two weeks ago when I left, Kamala Harris was just dominating the Against Donald Trump. | ||
Everybody was freaking out. | ||
That's changed. That has certainly changed in the last two weeks. | ||
It's been two weeks of steady movement away from Kamala Harris and towards Donald Trump. | ||
And something happened. | ||
I have some speculation on this. | ||
Yeah, she's spent the last two weeks desperately trying to Make up the ground with media appearances. | ||
Here's the problem, though. | ||
She sucks, and everybody hates her, and every time they have to watch her, they hate her a little bit more. | ||
So it's not working. | ||
It doesn't work when the thing you have to do to try to make up your poll numbers actually lowers your poll numbers. | ||
Yeah, it's not going well for old Kamala Harris. | ||
And my theory is, and this is sort of a cross-the-board theory, But I'm fairly certain that the people actually running things, the puppet masters pulling the strings behind the scenes, have AI. They, like Alex Jones explained, | ||
like 10 years ago on Joe Rogan, I guess it wasn't 10 years ago, 8 years ago something, when he goes through and talks about the way that if you have all of this information and then you can sort of project into the future what you think is going to happen and then you can add... | ||
You can add stimuli into the algorithm and then figure out where it goes. | ||
If one thing happens versus another thing happens, then you can actually change the future based on those inputs. | ||
Like Alex Jones was talking about that on Joe Rogan the first time he went on. | ||
I guess, yeah, maybe 10 years ago. | ||
I'm almost 100% positive that's the case at this point, that the decisions being made are being made on the basis of algorithmic testing. | ||
And so something happened in the last two weeks. | ||
They kept changing the inputs or something else altered in the algorithm, and they all decided, okay, Trump's going to win. | ||
Trump's going to win. Or they put in... | ||
What if Trump wins and we do this? | ||
What if Trump loses and we do this? | ||
What if Trump wins and we do something else? | ||
And they figured out, alright, Trump is probably going to win, and so we need to be on his side in some way. | ||
Something happened where everybody sort of came together and went okay, this whole Kamala Harris Hilarious prank we played on everybody isn't actually gonna come to fruition. She's not actually gonna be president So it's time to start playing nice with Trump's time to start pretending that we've known this was gonna be the case the whole time And actually we're fine with Trump being in charge as long as he you know leaves our particular branch of the government alone I don't know what happened exactly but things have definitely shifted politically. | ||
you We'll get into why that might be, and we'll certainly watch some of the outcome of this, including Saturday Night Live mocking the hell out of Kamala and Biden in a very funny way. | ||
Another sign of the times that things have shifted, and the, again, hilarious prank, the absurd joke of Kamala Harris' presidential campaign is wearing a little thin hat. | ||
It's not quite doing it anymore, and they're all recognizing that finally. | ||
We'll get into all of that and more. | ||
I want to take a lot of your phone calls today. | ||
You can catch me up on what's been going on over the last two weeks. | ||
And I've been paying attention. | ||
I just haven't been thinking very much about it. | ||
That's a big difference. I've just been letting it wash over me. | ||
But we'll get into it. | ||
We'll get into all of that and we'll begin today as we do every day with our daily dispatch. | ||
Your Daily Dispatch for Monday, the 14th of October, 2024. | ||
Trump neck and neck with Harris in NBC poll. | ||
Trump's advantages over Harris on immigration and inflation in particular have grown significantly. | ||
And Kamala Harris' five-point lead over Donald Trump has now disappeared, according to NBC. NBC's Steve Kornecki. | ||
Kornicki broke the news to Kristen Welker on Sunday. | ||
He said whatever advantage Kamala Harris had over Trump as a result of the debate is gone. | ||
It's completely gone. It's never going to come back. | ||
We'll show you some videos to illustrate that, to ask why, and to see what exactly the powers that be are doing to confront this deadly threat to their continuing existence. | ||
Meanwhile, man arrested near Donald Trump's California rally with loaded guns, police say. | ||
The suspect, identified as Las Vegas resident Vem Miller, was apprehended by authorities about half a mile from the entrance to the Coachella rally. | ||
And this is being portrayed, being talked about as another assassination attempt. | ||
I'm a little bit hesitant. | ||
In fact, the first I heard of this was with Owen Troyer's post on X, going, let's pump the brakes a little bit. | ||
I'm not sure this is the assassination attempt everybody's saying it is. | ||
And I kind of agree. | ||
It's certainly not... I guess you have gradations of assassination attempts. | ||
On one end of the spectrum is a shooter firing at Donald Trump and hitting his ear with a bullet. | ||
That's an assassination attempt. | ||
When the bullet grazes the intended target, that's an assassination attempt. | ||
When some guy is caught with guns vaguely close to a rally, that's way on the other end of the spectrum. | ||
I can't remember exactly what Owen said on X, but it was something like, you know, this guy seems like a right-winger, and he probably has pictures with other right-wingers, and so there's probably people out there right now going, this guy's an assassin who have pictures with this guy, so that's not going to look good when you're pictured cozying up with who you are calling an attempted assassin. | ||
And he is apparently right-wing. | ||
The man, Vim Miller, was intercepted by police at a checkpoint about half a mile from an entrance to the rally at Coachella Valley, California, soon before it began. | ||
Soon before it began, police said Sunday. | ||
Soon before it began. | ||
Am I having a stroke? | ||
I read this story already. | ||
It's not until you're reading it out loud, you're like, what happened to... | ||
What happened to the press? | ||
What is going on here? So, I'm sorry, does this sentence make any sense to anybody else? | ||
He was intercepted by police at a checkpoint about half a mile from an entrance to the rally in Coachella Valley, California, soon before it began. | ||
Police said Sunday. | ||
Okay, great. Police said Miller was carrying a loaded shotgun, handgun, and high-capacity magazine and is believed to be a member of a right-wing anti-government organization. | ||
My goodness. He was booked for possessing a loaded firearm in high-capacity magazine and was released after posting a $5,000 bail, police records show. | ||
The incident did not impact the safety of Foreign President Trump or the attendees of the event, the Riverside County Sheriff's Office said in a police report, police release. | ||
The Secret Service put out a statement saying it was apprised of the arrest, saying the incident did not impact protective operations. | ||
The Secret Service extends its gratitude to the deputies and local partners who assisted safeguarding last night's events. | ||
The U.S. Attorney's Office in Los Angeles said in a statement on Sunday that while Trump was not in danger, the statement added that while no federal arrests had been made, an investigation was ongoing. | ||
Chad Bianco, Riverside County Sheriff, said in a press conference on Sunday that Miller was plotting to kill Trump, but acknowledged that was speculation. | ||
What we do know is that he showed up with multiple passports and different names, an unregistered vehicle with a fake license plate and loaded firearms, the sheriff said at a news conference on Sunday afternoon. | ||
We do not know whether he was an assassin. | ||
Any claims of an attempted assassination is pure speculation at this point. | ||
What we can tell you for sure is that the man was based. | ||
The man clearly was based and probably fun at parties. | ||
I don't know. I don't know. | ||
It just sounds like I would... | ||
From what I know so far, I kind of want to be friends with him. | ||
I don't know. Multiple passports and different names, unregistered vehicle, fake license plate, loaded firearms... | ||
Sounds like a fun Sunday afternoon to me. | ||
The suspect later told U.S. media that he was a Trump supporter who brought the guns for his own safety and notified police at a checkpoint that they were in the trunk of his car. | ||
These accolations are complete BS, Miller said. | ||
I'm an artist. I'm the last person that would cause violence and harm to anybody. | ||
I believe him. All I'm saying is I believe him. | ||
He gets stopped at a checkpoint. | ||
They're like, anything we should know about? | ||
And he's like, you mean the guns? | ||
You want to check out my guns I have in my... | ||
And suddenly he's... An attempted assassin. | ||
I don't know. He holds a UCLA master's degree. | ||
Well, alright. He's becoming less cool the more I read. | ||
Bianco says Miller considers himself a so-called sovereign citizen, a group of people who do not believe they are subject to any government statutes unless they consent to them. | ||
Cool guy. Seems like a cool guy. | ||
I don't know. Again, this is like all the headlines on... | ||
Acts are just like another assassination attempt thwarted. | ||
I don't know. I don't think so personally. | ||
Meanwhile, U.S. to send anti-missile system and troops to Israel. | ||
The U.S. will send troops and anti-missile systems to Israel to bolster its air defenses against attacks by Iran. | ||
The move is being described as, quote, highly unusual. | ||
President Joe Biden said on Sunday the deployment is intended to defend Israel, which is considering retaliation against Iran after it fired hundreds of missiles at Israel in the beginning of October. | ||
I'd personally like to thank Israel for withholding its response until I got back. | ||
It hasn't happened yet. | ||
Certainly people were expecting it two weeks ago. | ||
Hasn't happened yet. We may know why. | ||
We actually have a lot to talk about in terms of Israel today. | ||
So we'll get back into this. | ||
Yeah, so at least 100 troops in the THAAD, Terminal High Altitude Air Defense System, is being deployed to Israel to defend that country. | ||
Again, we'll get back into this. | ||
But that's essentially where we are in terms of continuous, endless, senseless, and seemingly purposeless, reasonless warfare. | ||
We've moved from the Congress having to declare war to the executive branch declaring war whenever it wanted to, to the National Defense Authorization Act. | ||
Just declaring whoever's against us as terrorists and justifying war against them. | ||
You just keep your head down. | ||
Don't worry about it, and we'll just deploy troops whenever, wherever, to whoever, and for whatever purpose we want, anywhere in the world, forever. | ||
So that's the boiling of the frog in that regard. | ||
Meanwhile, Palestinians burn to death after Israeli strike on Gaza hospital sets tents on fire. | ||
That's a headline, folks. | ||
That is a headline just jam-packed with our greatest ally. | ||
Palestinians burn to death after Israeli strike on Gaza hospital sets tents on fire. | ||
Okay, so they're striking hospitals, or rather they're striking the refugee camps hastily constructed outside of hospitals. | ||
And there's videos of women, children, and civilians burning alive. | ||
It's horrifying. | ||
Also, the last two weeks has been a continual stream of attacks on Lebanon by Israel. | ||
And again, we'll get back into Israel. | ||
There's a lot of developments in that regard, and we'll get into it. | ||
The Lebanon's Al-Jadid reports that at least 12 people have been killed in the Israeli strike on the Christian majority town of Aitu in northern Lebanon. | ||
And again, we'll... | ||
We'll get back into that. | ||
We'll get back into that in just a little bit. | ||
According to a report by the San Francisco Chronicle, the mandates will require face coverings in hospitals, nursing facilities, and other healthcare settings. | ||
The new orders are similar to last winter's health measures, which aim to slow virus transmission during the colder months. | ||
This time, however, the counties of Santa Clara and San Mateo are expanding the mandate to apply to both healthcare workers and visitors. | ||
Santa Clara County has gone a step farther, also requiring patients to wear masks. | ||
So they're doing that again. | ||
So that's still happening, I guess. | ||
I say don't comply. | ||
I say it's absurd that they're even asking you to comply. | ||
And obviously healthcare places are a little bit different than, you know, in your car by yourself or at the grocery store. | ||
But that's how it creeps in, isn't it? | ||
Isn't that always how it starts? | ||
So I say just snuff it out now. | ||
Abort this before it's viable. | ||
That's my take on that. | ||
That's your daily dispatch, of course, brought to you by InfoWarsStore.com and TheAlexJonesStore.com. | ||
TheAlexJonesStore.com is your go-to shop for Alex Jones Naturals products, apparel, and more. | ||
Now, whenever you check out at TheAlexJonesStore.com, you're automatically entered to win a 2024 Dodge Ram HD, a free giveaway worth over $100,000. | ||
And when you purchase high-quality products at TheAlexJonesStore.com, you support free speech and Alex Jones and the Information War, a true... | ||
360 win. And it really is. | ||
And I know I say it pretty much every time I have to take some sort of extended break, but there really is something so, so comforting and wonderful and brilliant about having a job. | ||
It's really nice having a job. | ||
It's really nice. Not even just getting paid, but having a stable job. | ||
Having a company that is there for you. | ||
Where you can take two weeks to do chores and change diapers and raise your kids. | ||
Knowing that the company is going to continue. | ||
You get paid time off. | ||
I have insurance because of this job. | ||
It's so different than how it would slash probably will be. | ||
When and if Infowars shuts down for good, in which case this battleship will be decommissioned. | ||
The Infowars headquarters will be shut down and all of the incredible talent that Alex Jones has gathered at this Mecca of Liberty will disperse and have to be off alone. | ||
And of course the illustration I always use is Is the rowboat versus the battleship. | ||
Here we all have our parts to play. | ||
We all are able to combine our talents and become greater than the sum of our parts. | ||
And without this, we're all just little rowboats just trying to vaguely row in the same direction. | ||
But whenever we have to rest, the boat just doesn't go anywhere. | ||
It just sits there. The mission isn't progressed. | ||
And... It's a shame. | ||
Obviously, it's a shame what they're doing to us, and it would be a shame for InfoWars to no longer exist. | ||
And the fact that we do exist, still exist, and have heretofore avoided the attacks destroying us completely is really a powerful thing and a wonderful thing and a necessary thing for the future of America and free speech and general awareness of In fact, on that note, let's start with clip number 21. | ||
This is Megyn Kelly, very recently, and she's gone through a similar process that so many former Fox News hosts have gone through. | ||
Tucker Carlson is one of them. | ||
The slow awakening of somebody already deeply embedded in mainstream politics. | ||
It's a unique process that goes on. | ||
It's always tempered. | ||
It's always slow. It's always more gradual than your typical red-pilling process. | ||
Your typical red-pilling process of some dude with no social media platform and no big following and no show on Fox News tend to hit the red pill hard and fast whenever it comes, right? | ||
Something happens. The illusion is shattered. | ||
They're just all in. | ||
When you're doing like a daily show like Tucker Carlson and having to go out and kind of toe the line, kind of convince yourself of what you're saying, it doesn't happen as quickly. | ||
It's more gradual, but it can be more extreme in some cases. | ||
Here's Megyn Kelly talking about the awakening process in a very strange way. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
Can I tell you, this is crazy, but a few years ago I interviewed Alex Jones and I sat down with him and he's, as we know, he's definitely done some not great things, especially when it comes to Newtown. | ||
However, one of the things he was telling me was about fluoride and about early puberty and about the frogs when exposed that went from male to female. | ||
I went back to NBC, we had all these fact checkers. | ||
It was all true. | ||
We found out all this stuff he was saying was true. | ||
And here I am across from you, Harvard-educated Johns Hopkins, attending physicians saying, yeah, fluoride, just like Alex Jones was saying, not good. | ||
It's crazy. Yeah. | ||
But they'll shove it in your kid's mouth just on a general cleaning. | ||
They want to saturate your kid in fluoride, like rinses or gels, just for kicks. | ||
And that's bad. But, you know, the real issue is, That it's in the drinking water. | ||
Lots of things are poisonous, but you get to choose whether or not to take them. | ||
It's the fact that they don't ask and are just poisoning your tap water and then hiding it from you and then denying that it has any negative effects. | ||
I'm glad Megyn Kelly's waking up a little bit. | ||
A couple questions, though. For one thing, I don't remember during the NBC segment them confirming everything Alex Jones was saying about fluoride and Frogs, gay frogs, and all this other stuff. | ||
She says right there that they go back to NBC and they have all of these fact checkers and the fact checkers say, actually, he's right. | ||
Did that come through in the final cut of the Alex Jones interview? | ||
When they were having their exchange, it cut out to a segment of Megyn Kelly going, well, Alex Jones might sound crazy here. | ||
Actually, he's dead on. | ||
And it's not just frogs. | ||
It's all animals in the watershed that are being poisoned by atrazine. | ||
I don't remember that. So it's a little bit telling on herself that Megyn Kelly's like, oh, yeah, when he said all of that, all the fact checkers confirmed it was true on NBC. And yet we still mocked him and said he was wrong anyway. | ||
So I'm glad Megyn Kelly's waking up, but what I took away from that is, man, their dishonesty is really just out in the open at this point. | ||
More on the other side. | ||
Stay with us, folks. | ||
unidentified
|
You're listening to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is The American Journal. | ||
We've got a lot to talk about. I want to talk about first the election. | ||
What's going on exactly? | ||
Things are changing. | ||
The tide is turning. | ||
The Democrats are freaking out. | ||
Their lives aren't working. | ||
Their gaslighting is falling on deaf ears. | ||
And it's mixed parts. | ||
Hilarious and embarrassing and cringy. | ||
But clearly something is... | ||
And again, I don't know whether this is a concerted sort of order, like if whatever's happening is actually got... | ||
Certain results from their AI machine that they sit there and go, okay, it looks like Trump is winning. | ||
Time to shift into plan B. We were on Trump's side the whole time kind of operation. | ||
Or whether this is just the hive mind moving in tandem without coordination, I don't really know. | ||
Clearly everybody's starting to get it at this point if they aren't lying or have their heads in the sand. | ||
And it might just be that the illusion couldn't be maintained that long. | ||
I'll tell you, I was talking to my dad about this a couple weeks ago. | ||
Probably about two weeks ago. | ||
Because he's always going, he's always asking me, like, do you think Trump's going to win? | ||
I mean, do you really think it looks like, you know, why would they be saying Kamala's so much farther ahead if she's not? | ||
And so he'll send me TikTok videos of, People talking about how Kamala Harris is kicking Trump's butt and she's doing so well. | ||
But when I'd watch these, it'd be like, okay, I just watched a video of a British woman who lives in Australia and she's talking about how incredible Kamala Harris's campaign is. | ||
Then as you listen to You're like, okay, this woman, she's a TikToker. | ||
She clearly gets all of her news through TikTok. | ||
She's talking about a British woman living in Japan who's seeing the entire political contest through the lens of paid operatives on TikTok. | ||
So what you end up with is the best, the perfect distillation of what they want people to believe. | ||
When you get someone like this, they're just like, you know, Kamala Harris' campaign is just so powerful, like everybody's into it, and the joy message is just resonating so powerfully with people, and it's like, no, that's the illusion. | ||
That's the illusion they're trying to create. | ||
That's why they pay TikTokers $15,000 to spread that message, to trick other TikTokers, to try in some sort of Black magic inversion creates the illusion into, you know, manifest the illusion into something real, and maybe that just can't go on forever. | ||
Maybe you get a couple months where that can trick a certain number of people, but at a certain point, it all crumbles. | ||
It all falls apart. There's a shelf life for this deception, and it's expired at this point. | ||
And one of the obvious... | ||
Outcomes of this is that Kamala's campaign has just been trying to become Trump's campaign. | ||
It's been a problem the whole time that she's stealing Trump's platform and policies. | ||
When she bothered to have a policy, it was Trump's. | ||
But they went from white guys for Kamala... | ||
Being a bunch of soy boy beta cuck losers from LA crying into their webcam about how happy they are to be subjugated by a foreign woman. | ||
Into Tim Waltz trying to prove that he's a hunter by sexually assaulting a gun on camera. | ||
It's not working. It's not where they're trying to turn the page on masculinity. | ||
In fact, I need to grab, I don't know if it's been played on InfoWars yet, but the Kamala Harris, I'm a cuck for Kamala video. | ||
They have all these guys like, yeah, I'm a man. | ||
So I shut up when my wife's talking to me. | ||
It's very weird. It's all very strange when leftists try to be masculine or try to warp masculinity. | ||
It just doesn't work. | ||
Long story short, it don't work. | ||
It's never going to work. It's not working. | ||
Even SNL, and this is the thing, it's like, okay, is SNL just sort of swaying with the times? | ||
Or are they plugged in somehow? | ||
Is there even a point to watch them anymore considering the fact that the, you know, impersonators of Kamala Harris that are on TikTok and X and Infowars are way better, way more convincing than the professional actresses they have playing Kamala on SNL. Let's go to this SNL clip. | ||
This is from this Saturday. | ||
Kamala Harris dies inside when asked while she's losing. | ||
unidentified
|
Clip 16. We've got two political rivals. | |
on this side is the Democrats led by Vice President Kamala Harris. | ||
It's wonderful to be here, Steve. | ||
I love to see a man getting paid millions of dollars at his black job. | ||
And I'd like to say a black thank you. | ||
You have been out there this week. | ||
I saw you on Univision and Stephen Colbert. | ||
Yeah, Steve, it's been a hell of a week. | ||
I went on Howard Stern to reach the horny cab drivers. | ||
I went on The View for the horny moms. | ||
And I also went on the podcast Call Her Daddy because I have a message. | ||
I have a message for young women, okay? | ||
You need to go to the ballot box if you want the government out your ballot box. | ||
Okay, I see what you did there. | ||
I see what you did there. Yeah, yeah, and it's working. | ||
My campaign has raised a billion dollars. | ||
Oh my lord. | ||
How are you not winning by a landslide? | ||
Yeah, that's a question I scream into my pillow every morning. | ||
It's one of those things where, again, talking about these conversations I've had with my dad, I remember watching The Daily Show in high school, and my dad being like, it's all just left-wing propaganda. | ||
I'm like, no, no, but he makes fun of both sides, though. | ||
No, but see how he's making fun of Obama and Bush? | ||
It's not left-wing propaganda. | ||
It's like, no, it is. No, it is. | ||
And you have to be able to recognize it. | ||
It's like what we just saw. Are they making fun of Kamala? | ||
Kind of. Like, a little bit more than they typically do. | ||
But what was the actual message I was coming across? | ||
It's, first of all, like a pause break for the Kamala Harris actor. | ||
And I don't know, maybe that's just the audience actually not knowing whether... | ||
Whether it's real or not, you know, maybe they are just so lost in a realm of delusion that they hear Kamala Harris and they're just like cheering out, you know, who knows? | ||
Who knows? But then, you know, it's like, wow, you've raised a billion dollars. | ||
You're so popular. Why aren't you winning in a landslide? | ||
Why is this thing even close? | ||
Okay, they're not really mocking Kamala per se. | ||
They're engaged in propaganda. | ||
They're still embedding with the premise of their jokes the idea that Kamala Harris is super popular and should be way out in the head and that it's weird and stupid that she's not. | ||
I think I have this clip as well. | ||
Let's go to clip number 20. You know it's bad when SNL is openly mocking Kamala Harris and Joe Biden. | ||
unidentified
|
Clip 20. Oh man, that felt good. | |
And Donald doesn't think I'm black. | ||
Okay, listen up everyone. | ||
We couldn't have gotten here without one man. | ||
And his name is J'Biden. | ||
Get on out here to Bud. | ||
-$10,000. | ||
$10,000. | ||
Close. That's right. | ||
A lot of people forget I'm president, including me. | ||
But guess what? | ||
And by the way... | ||
I think I did a pretty good job. | ||
I passed more bills than any president history. | ||
But folks, we've still got work to do, no joke. | ||
I'm being serious right now. | ||
Come on. And guess what? | ||
And by the way... | ||
The fact of the matter is, the rich don't pay their fair share. | ||
They gotta pay their fair share. | ||
We gotta build back better. | ||
The build back the better, the better the better. | ||
Build back the better. Can't believe it's not butter. | ||
Thank you to Biden. Thank you so much. | ||
Thank you. Thank you. | ||
And I just want to say, I just want to say thank you to Biden. | ||
Thank you for putting country first and for handing over the reins. | ||
I didn't want to. They made me. | ||
And guess what? And by the way, the fact of the matter is, no joke, this is serious right now. | ||
I mean, it's serious. Anyway, in conclusion, me and Vice President Harris are the same. | ||
Oh, okay, ha ha, great stuff. | ||
Thank you, Joe. Thank you so much. | ||
Thank you. All right, goodbye, Joe. | ||
Goodbye, goodbye, dude. He's got the walk down. | ||
All right? We gotta stay focused. | ||
Okay? And let me tell you something. | ||
If we win together, we can end the drama. | ||
And the Tramala. | ||
And go relax in our pajamalas. | ||
Because if there's one thing I know... | ||
Uh-oh, he's back. He's back. | ||
Let's see. All right. | ||
You want in? Yeah. | ||
Come on in. Okay. | ||
Hey. Hey there. Is that nice? | ||
Yeah, it's really good. | ||
Okay. Hi there. | ||
Okay. How did I get back here? | ||
I don't... It's pretty good. | ||
It's pretty good. We could have had this the whole time. | ||
You know, you could have been making fun of this the whole time. | ||
But that would have been dangerous. | ||
That would have been dangerous. | ||
You would have been helping Donald Trump. | ||
Now they're doing it to try to draw a distinction between Kamala and Biden. | ||
Because, again, it helps Kamala. | ||
So it's like, yeah, they're making fun of her, kind of. | ||
They're making fun of him, kind of. | ||
But in a very safe way that only helps their side in a subliminal sort of way. | ||
And it just seems to me like everything at this point is becoming decentralized. | ||
It's weird how the same process that's happening in journalism is happening in comedy. | ||
If you want to see the funniest Joe Biden impression ever, you got to watch Shane Gillis and I don't even know the guy's names. | ||
I can't even credit him. | ||
But Shane Gillis and Adam Ray, thank you, crew, on Kill Tony, who dressed up as Trump and Biden. | ||
Hysterical. Hilarious. | ||
Just so much better than SNL. And like, you just have to think, like, man... | ||
So for decades, now that it's all becoming decentralized, now that TikTok and X have taken the place of mainstream media, it's so obvious how much more talent there is out there. | ||
So it's like, okay, for decades, these things held up as the paragon of journalism, the paragon, the ultimate of comedy, SNL. Everybody knows it's always kind of sucked, but it was really, it was always this bad. | ||
It was always this lame. | ||
It was always this unfunny. | ||
And we just were forced to settle for it. | ||
Like Kamala, you know, she's got, you know, the impressions. | ||
It's okay. You know, she's got some of the stuff down. | ||
It doesn't hold a candle. | ||
Some of the people we've had on this show playing Kamala. | ||
Nobody does better Trump than Shane Gillis. | ||
And the Biden character in this video. | ||
Holy crap. He's got a down pat and is hysterical and it's all improv. | ||
So it's just in a way, you know, even leaving to the side the content of the skits, it's nice to see these old decrepit facades of the former media empire collapse and be replaced by so much funnier, so much more talented, so much more interesting people. | ||
And not under the control of a bunch of leftists who only go as far as they think they need to to maintain some semblance of credibility while still pumping propaganda down your throat. | ||
But there may be some more truth to the skit that we just saw than... | ||
Well, Kamala Harris would want to admit. | ||
From Postmillennial, and this story is really... | ||
Across all the mainstream media today, shade war between Kamala and Biden heats up as Election Day nears. | ||
As Election Day approaches, tensions between Vice President Kamala Harris' team and President Joe Biden's White House staff are reportedly under strain, according to sources who spoke with Axios. | ||
The friction stems from lingering frustration within Biden's camp over the president being pressured by his own party to step down and not run for re-election. | ||
The conflict stems from the fact that they performed a coup against the president and he's not happy about it. | ||
That one of the prime movers in the coup is now taking his place without ever having been voted for. | ||
Yeah, that might cause some lingering frustration. | ||
No, they got to be at each other's throat. | ||
It's probably vicious. | ||
I mean, they're all terrible people. | ||
We know that. We know there's no good side to this conflict. | ||
It's, you know, just two rats fighting each other. | ||
It's like, but they're both rats. | ||
It's like, yeah, I guess, but, you know, they've got conflict. | ||
Yeah, they might both be Democrats, but they're all also just bad people. | ||
Who backstab each other and then seethe and harbored resentment before they can get their vengeance and continue that cycle on and on forever. | ||
I see people speculating. | ||
Maybe we'll take calls. Maybe this is what we'll take calls on today. | ||
Is Joe Biden going to endorse Donald Trump? | ||
Would such a thing happen? | ||
He's already put on the MAGA hat. | ||
He's doing some things now and frankly it's working and again it's one of these funny things where it's like you see this video and we played it on the day and I had the same reaction. | ||
I have a lot of stuff Joe Biden does. | ||
He's hilarious. He seems like a nice guy. | ||
If he'd been this guy the whole time We might not even have that big of a problem with him. | ||
He's putting on the MAGAD. He's joking around. | ||
He's making fun of his own age. | ||
I'm an old man. You know, I don't think so well anymore. | ||
And it's like, oh, he's humble. | ||
He's nice. It's like, this might be the best thing that's ever happened to Joe Biden is him being freed from the shackle of partisan politics. | ||
I think I said on Brianna Morella's show, it's like he was born to occupy the position of retired president. | ||
A president that doesn't actually have to do anything. | ||
He's killing it up there. | ||
If he'd just been doing this the whole time, well, he probably wouldn't have been ousted by his vice president and replaced in a blatant coup. | ||
Maybe I'm misremembering it. | ||
But did anybody even think Harris was a possibility before the coup happened? | ||
I'm trying to think back. Everybody knew that they'd have to replace Joe Biden. | ||
There's a lot of speculation about that. | ||
And there was a lot of speculation about who his replacement would be. | ||
And I remember Kamala Harris being mentioned as an obvious possibility. | ||
But nobody ever thought it was going to be Kamala. | ||
People were talking about Gavin Newsom. | ||
People were talking about Michelle Obama. | ||
There was a lot of speculation about who might replace Biden. | ||
Nobody even thought it would be Kamala. | ||
It really shows you what a... | ||
Frankly, brilliant move. | ||
The coup was. That they. | ||
Switch out Joe Biden in this like three card Monty sleight of hand move, replace him with somebody nobody even thought was a possibility. | ||
Maybe I'm misremembering before Trump before Biden got ousted. | ||
You know, speculation about Gavin Newsom. | ||
Well, he's got some good and some bad. | ||
You know, speculation about, like, Josh Shapiro. | ||
Like, random governors elsewhere. | ||
Whenever Kamala Harris would come up, it'd just be like, well, yeah, I mean, but no. | ||
But, I mean, it's Kamala Harris. | ||
They wouldn't even, that's... | ||
We're not even going to entertain that as a possibility. | ||
And yet, they did it. | ||
And yet, they did it. | ||
They swapped him out with somebody everybody hated. | ||
Nobody even thought was a dark horse in the race. | ||
Let alone at the top of the ticket. | ||
And now, obviously, we're all seeing why. | ||
Because she sucks. | ||
Because the more that you hear her, the less you like her. | ||
I'm not even going to subject you to the videos that have come out over the last two weeks of her appearances on The View or Oprah Winfrey. | ||
She takes like five minutes to tell some story about cooking pancakes and bacon. | ||
And it's just the most fraudulent, vapid, fake thing you've ever seen ever. | ||
She sucks. They suck. | ||
They all suck. The Democrats. | ||
And they're being hoisted by their own petard. | ||
They're being screwed in the bed they made. | ||
Their chickens are coming home to roost. | ||
And I only pray that what we're seeing now is the outcome of their internal polls that show that Trump's campaign is so far ahead that they can't even cheat to get him in. | ||
To get her in, rather. To keep him out. | ||
But obviously they're trying to keep this thing going momentarily. | ||
While the Biden team is still supporting a Harris victory in November, many remain uneasy about the transition from running Biden's re-election campaign to now backing a different candidate. | ||
They're too much in their feelings, a close Harris ally told Axios, referring to Biden's team. | ||
Oh, and I think we've identified the problem. | ||
They're too much in their feelings, says the spokesperson for the campaign built entirely on feelings 100% using a GNZ slang. | ||
I think we've identified the problem. | ||
I think it's that both candidates are puppets of their hugely ideologically captured Socialist, Gen Z social media managers who are actually running things. | ||
Who are all immature and too much in their feelings and say things like they're too much in their feelings. | ||
Which is just a nonsense phrase for dummies to think that they're saying something. | ||
There have also been concerns regarding miscommunication with event coordination and media strategy. | ||
Last Friday, Biden held an impromptu White House press conference just as Harris was about to participate in a key campaign event in the swing state of Michigan. | ||
TV coverage switched from her event to that of the president speaking. | ||
Was it an accident? | ||
We don't know. | ||
Additionally, during the ongoing news coverage of hurricanes on the East Coast, Harris criticized Florida Governor Ron DeSantis for not taking her phone call. | ||
However, Biden publicly praised DeSantis for being gracious and cooperative in handling the disaster. | ||
DeSantis met with Biden and accused Harris of making a political game out of the disaster in his state. | ||
The White House is lacking somebody in the room, thinking first and foremost about how things would affect the campaign, a source from the Harris video told Axios. | ||
Which again, every quote from the Harris campaign is just like, okay, you're being run by children, by hyper-partisan children who can't even manage to disguise their petulance. | ||
What are they even trying to convey here? | ||
The White House is lacking somebody in the room thinking first and foremost about how things would affect the campaign. | ||
They should be thinking first and foremost about the hundreds of people killed during the shocking once-in-a-lifetime storm that's flooded out five states and destroyed the homes of tens of thousands of people. | ||
They need to be thinking about me first. | ||
The problem is that they have priorities that aren't me. | ||
Yeah, that's the mindset. No, the picture is becoming clear. | ||
And I hate to say it, but it sounds like maybe accidentally the Biden campaign is acting like a responsible faction of government. | ||
And that's pissing off the enemies within. | ||
However, some have wondered whether these examples of miscommunication between the two teams are intentional due to lingering resentment from the Biden team. | ||
This also comes after Biden's odd decision to playfully wear a Trump hat in front of reporters in Pennsylvania. | ||
The strained relationship is also evident as several Biden aides have left the White House to join the Harris campaign. | ||
This has caused some within Biden's circle to feel those departing are being labeled as disloyal. | ||
Now, they're loyal to the only thing Kamala Harris is loyal to, power. | ||
They only believe in the only thing that Kamala Harris believes in, power. | ||
Oh, this person has been stripped of their power? | ||
Bye! I'm going to go with the person who stripped them of the power. | ||
Because I want to be where the power is. | ||
Yeah, what we're seeing here is the inevitable outcome of two different presidential campaigns, two different factions within the Democratic Party, both of whom are populated entirely by childish incompetents who are obsessed with and concerned only with the acquisition of and exercise of Unrestrained power over their enemies. | ||
So... Yeah. | ||
Yeah, no. You're all terrible. | ||
No, a plague on both of your houses, actually. | ||
You can all tear each other apart for all I care. | ||
And that's that. | ||
And when we get back on the other side, we're going to talk about a campaign that actually cares about things and has beliefs and has policies and wants to solve problems... | ||
And is working together and absolutely destroying the mainstream media puppets attempting to derail their righteous crusade to save America in her final hour. | ||
Stay with us for the second hour. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll be right back. You're listening to the American Journal with your host Harrison Smith. | |
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. It is Columbus Day today. | ||
The day where we honor the just unfathomably brave heroes of the age of exploration who crossed an ocean on little wooden boats To bring the new world into the timeline of humanity. | ||
And by that I mean, and I should have brought the book, but I've read it on the air before. | ||
There's a book called The Colonial Experience. | ||
I think that's what it's called. And it starts off by talking about history itself and the fact that I've talked about this before, and people get insulted by it, but you've got to understand, this is just a fact of history, and it's true for basically all peoples. | ||
I mean, it is true for all peoples. | ||
There comes a time when the endless repetition of generations takes on a meaning and a purpose and even just a vision of themselves in the greater timeline of humanity. | ||
That is absent in tribal prehistory organization. | ||
In other words, to the Native Americans prior to 1492, every day was like every other day, every year was like every other year, sort of just an Because without history, without the knowledge of history, without seeing where you are in a timeline of advancement, you can just be the same thing over and over. | ||
The sunrise is sunset. Sunrise is sunset. | ||
You wake up, you hunt, eat. | ||
You wake up, you hunt, eat. | ||
You wake up, you hunt, eat. Over and over, generation upon generation. | ||
And you contrast that to the mindset of the European colonizers, the European adventurers who came over. | ||
Who were Christian, who weren't sort of just spending time like every other generation has spent time just doing the same thing over and over, but actually saw themselves in a timeline of history that began with Adam and Eve and went through the Roman ages. | ||
Like, there is this Progress, the knowledge being part of this, being able to write it down, passing it on to further generations, putting you in this continuum of humanity that until tribal peoples make contact with this civilization, we don't know. | ||
We don't know who the heroes were of Native Americans a thousand years ago. | ||
We have no idea. We have day-to-day... | ||
Information about people a thousand years ago in England. | ||
And it is a wonderful thing that the Europeans found themselves in this incredible situation in the 1400s, in the 1500s, where they were able to settle an entirely unconquered landmass. | ||
But I want to go to this speech from Kamala Harris. | ||
And talk about some of the more subtle insinuations that she's making that don't just degrade Europeans and turn their heroic adventurism into something nasty and mean and bad in a totally dishonest way, | ||
but also downplays and disrespects the Native Americans who were not And were never the Care Bears. | ||
They were not Smurfs. They were not all living in harmony. | ||
You know, just singing and dancing until the Europeans showed up. | ||
They were actually very strong and very powerful and very impressive in a lot of ways. | ||
And to... Try to paint the Europeans as bad. | ||
They downplay the reality of Native Americans in a way that does disrespect them and leave them as a two-dimensional caricature of who they are in order to degrade Europeans. | ||
It's strange. We all get it. | ||
unidentified
|
You're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
We'll go to this clip from Kamal Harris talking about Columbus Day. | ||
I have a lot to talk about in terms of what's going on in the Middle East. | ||
There's a lot of crazy things that are happening there. | ||
I also want to just get back into politics and show you some clips of J.D. Vance just absolutely killing it on the campaign trail. | ||
And by it, I mean the lies of the mainstream media. | ||
But it is Columbus Day. | ||
I'll tell you, I think it's absurd, this dance we do every year. | ||
every year. | ||
People push for Indigenous Peoples Day, and we have to try to maintain and talk about the importance of Columbus Day. | ||
It's very exhausting. | ||
These people just need to shut up already. | ||
Columbus was awesome. | ||
We... In the West, celebrate our heroes, in particular people who took on incredible, seemingly impossible challenges, succeeded against all odds, and changed the world forever. | ||
A truly incredible thing worth celebrating for any number of reasons. | ||
And I always think it's kind of silly when people say, well, but the Norse discovered America first, and it's like... | ||
Okay, kind of. Kind of, I guess. | ||
unidentified
|
A little bit. But they left. | |
They were there for one season, and then they went home. | ||
And as a fan of history, I love these little moments where a decision is made by a person or a group of people That changes history in a way that the people themselves could never even possibly imagine. | ||
You know, at one point, Christopher Columbus was standing in front of the king and queen of Spain, and history was on a precipice. | ||
It was perched on a roof, and it could roll one way or another. | ||
And had the mood been a little different, If, you know, maybe the breakfast they ate weren't sitting with them right and they were just in a bad mood that day. | ||
Like, who knows what little minute change could have happened. | ||
Instead of saying, very well, Mr. | ||
Columbus, we will sponsor your trip. | ||
Best of luck. They said, it's very intriguing, but it's not for us today. | ||
And then what does the world look like today? | ||
500 years on, what type of world are we living in? | ||
It's impossible to even know how different things would be. | ||
Without the discovery of the new world. | ||
And it could have happened. And it was probably just a quotidian sort of thing, right? | ||
They're probably all day every day meeting with people with all sorts of crazy ideas and asking for money and hoping to get patronage. | ||
And who knows? | ||
Maybe they weren't even thinking it was that important. | ||
Maybe their mind was on other stuff. | ||
And they're just like, whatever, three boats, fine. | ||
That's fine. You have it. Take it. | ||
Who cares, right? Who knows how much importance they put on this? | ||
Could they have possibly understood the gravity of the decision they were making? | ||
Who knows? And, you know, it's obviously fun to do what-if scenarios with history. | ||
But probably my favorite one, and the one that I wish, if I could go back in time, this might be the moment I go back to. | ||
It would be when the Norse adventurers from Greenland, from Iceland, landed on the North American shores. | ||
So if you don't know this story... | ||
They landed and they sort of were like, oh, there's land here. | ||
It might be good. They went back. | ||
They came back a second time and they got attacked by the Native Americans. | ||
Which even just that alone. | ||
Can you imagine? Can you imagine what that conflict was like? | ||
The Vikings coming against the Native Americans. | ||
And they fought each other. And they basically said, you know what? | ||
It's not worth it. We're just going to go back to Iceland. | ||
You know, this whole Vinland, they called it Vinland, this colony that they started planting, but it didn't last at all. | ||
And it's just one of those historic what-ifs that's like, what if they stayed? | ||
What if instead of the Native Americans 500 years later being confronted with Europeans who had advanced for 500 years in that time, who had guns and all this stuff... | ||
What if instead the Native Americans had encountered Europeans on a more technologically equal level? | ||
What would have happened if either the Natives didn't attack or the Norse decided, no, it's worth it. | ||
We're going to fight to stay here. | ||
What would it have been like if America and Europe had been aware of one another 500 years before, where maybe the diseases that wiped out almost all of the native inhabitants of the Americas had been introduced in a more slow way, so it hadn't been as devastating. | ||
Or they could have actually founded trade networks And been sharing in the technological advancements of Europe at the time. | ||
It's a real tragedy that that's not what happened, in my opinion. | ||
So I don't think the natives would have been wiped out in the way that they were if instead the transatlantic connection had been made during the Viking Age in the 1000s. | ||
It's It's just one of those things where you would have loved to be there when I'm sure the council of the Vikings is sitting there going, I mean, we could stay. | ||
We could. It's just kind of hard. | ||
I mean, maybe we'll go back for supplies and then come back. | ||
And just at one point, somebody went, you know, the leader, I'm sure, it was Leif or Eric the Red or Leif Erickson. | ||
I said, nah, you know what? Pack it up. | ||
We're going home. It's not worth it. | ||
This whole Vinland thing. Who cares? | ||
We're going back. And if that coin flip had landed on the other side, if that decision had gone the other way, God only knows what the world would look like now. | ||
And you wonder what's going on today. | ||
What decisions today of seemingly little importance have Are in fact altering the entire trajectory of humanity itself for all of time. | ||
These are the types of things I think we should be considering on Columbus Day. | ||
But our Vice President, Kamala Harris, has some different ideas. | ||
And they're everything that you would guess they are. | ||
They're the typical leftist deconstructionism. | ||
Hatred of white Christian Europeans, demonizing them and playing up the innocent flower child, noble savage lie of the Native Americans. | ||
Let's watch. To be with you this week as we celebrate Indigenous People's Day, as we speak truth about our nation's history. | ||
Since 1934, every October, the United States has recognized the voyage of the European explorers who first landed on the shores of the Americas. | ||
But that is not the whole story. | ||
That has never been the whole story. | ||
Those explorers ushered in a wave of devastation for tribal nations. | ||
Perpetrating violence, stealing land, and spreading disease. | ||
We must not shy away from this shameful past. | ||
And we must shed light on it and do everything we can to address the impact of the past on Native communities today. | ||
Counterpoint? No, shut up. | ||
That's my counterpoint. | ||
My counterpoint is you go be embarrassed for your ancestors. | ||
You go be ashamed of the great men who took risks that you can't even imagine to create a world that was impossible before them. | ||
You go cry about it, okay? | ||
We're done. We're done pretending this is bad. | ||
You ever heard a Mongolian talk about Genghis Khan? | ||
You want to talk about spreading death and destruction to disease? | ||
It's not just that it is a lie that these people spout constantly. | ||
It's that even if it were true... | ||
Who cares? Who cares? | ||
Literally, there's like a statue the size of this Statue of Liberty in Mongolia of Genghis freaking Khan. | ||
The guy who just killed everybody. | ||
I mean, the number, it's innumerable. | ||
The number of horrific, like crazy massacres that Genghis Khan committed for fun. | ||
Because he just wanted to do it. | ||
I think it was against the Kievan Rus where they had a bunch of prisoners and they tied up the prisoners, stacked them on top of each other, and then built like a dance floor on top of them to crush them all to death. | ||
Just like, because they wanted to. | ||
Genghis Khan would tell me to go, you must have done something wrong because God sent me here and all I do is murder and rape and pillage. | ||
Yeah, go tell a Mongolian. | ||
We have to reckon with the past of Genghis Khan. | ||
And they're just like, no, he was awesome. | ||
He killed everybody because of how strong and cool he was. | ||
So shut up. So just shut up already. | ||
And that's not to say that the destruction of the Native Americans was good. | ||
I think it was bad. | ||
I personally don't like what happened to the Native Americans. | ||
I can also see why it happened. | ||
And I can also understand the motive motivation on on both sides And there's there's stories that illustrate it you But primarily the issue was a very simple conflict of cultures where the Europeans had a hierarchy that was powerful. | ||
And because they had a powerful hierarchy, the young men who were full of aggression and testosterone were tempered by the older men who were in charge. | ||
Now, in Native American society, there wasn't a powerful hierarchy. | ||
Certainly, they respected their elders, but not enough to listen to them if it was against their inclination. | ||
And so what you had instead was, you'd have some tribal organization where the chief would go and make an agreement with the white settlers. | ||
And then the young guys in that tribe would go, well, we don't like that. | ||
And the guy would go, yeah, but I mean, this is the agreement we made, so we need to stick with it. | ||
And the young guys would go, screw that. | ||
I'm going to take me and my friends. | ||
We're going to go mess them up. | ||
And so to the natives... | ||
They were like, well, we're sticking with our... | ||
So then the young men would go and attack and the European settlers would come and go, what the hell? | ||
You weren't supposed to do this. | ||
And the old men would go, well, that wasn't us. | ||
That was those young men. We couldn't do anything about it. | ||
But to the Europeans who have the strong hierarchy, they go, no, you're all one. | ||
You're all responsible for one another. | ||
So we're going to hold you to account for what those young men did. | ||
You're all in the same tribe. | ||
And so it's just a totally different vision of responsibility and culture and to the... | ||
To the Native Americans, they were like, we try. | ||
We try to tell these young guys, hey, don't go attack the whites. | ||
But they get a bee in their bonnet and they go off and attack. | ||
And the white people hold all of us to account. | ||
It was very messy and unfortunate. | ||
I don't like it. I don't like how it ended up, obviously. | ||
But then to portray it like that is so despicable and dishonest and hateful, honestly. | ||
It's hateful. Because you could do exactly the same thing. | ||
With Native Americans. It's almost impossible to imagine now. | ||
unidentified
|
But. Nobody would. | |
Be confused by this. | ||
If somebody went up and. | ||
Basically gave. The Kamala Harris speech but inverted. | ||
And went yeah we celebrate Columbus. | ||
Because you know Columbus arrived on these shores. | ||
And was met with destruction and savagery. | ||
Barbarism. And heroically put it down. | ||
In the same way that she says the transatlantic contact created devastation, perpetuated violence, spread disease. | ||
unidentified
|
Did it though? | |
I mean, did it spread disease? | ||
Yes. Did they even know what diseases were back then? | ||
No, absolutely not. | ||
So, you're blaming them for bringing disease when they don't even have the concept. | ||
They don't even understand. | ||
They couldn't possibly comprehend that the people in the new world didn't have the necessary antibodies to deal with the novel viruses that have been spreading around the old world for millennia. | ||
But when you say they spread disease, that certainly sounds like a choice they're making. | ||
It sounds like you're blaming them for something they couldn't possibly even conceive of happening. | ||
So we can put that to the side, even though it's the only true thing she said there is the Europeans did spread disease, but not on purpose, not by design, not because they wanted to, because it's disease and it was the 1400s. | ||
But do you think they brought violence? | ||
Do you think before the Europeans got here, they didn't know violence here? | ||
What devastation exactly? | ||
The truth about the Native Americans, Central, South, North Americans, is they were worthy opponents. | ||
They were extremely warlike. | ||
They were extremely powerful. | ||
They were, in some cases, extremely brutal. | ||
Far more than the Europeans. | ||
And to play it down, to portray them as, like I said, Care Bears or Smurfs or whatever the blue people are from Avatar. | ||
These people weren't just sitting around in drum circles, smoking peyote. | ||
And having orgies. Like, they weren't a bunch of hippies. | ||
They were warriors. They were fighters. | ||
And it's in an effort to portray the Europeans as some brutal, advanced civilization just coming in and killing all of these innocent, beautiful Indians, Native Americans. | ||
That what you're really doing is not just misconstruing, but in a way disrespecting the Native Americans. | ||
Who, again, would have told you, like, no, we're not innocent. | ||
We're not helpless. | ||
We're warriors. We're powerful. | ||
Scalp your ass. Don't think we won't. | ||
But that's the image that most, you know, young kids are going up with today. | ||
It's a lie. It is a blatant lie about the Native Americans being peaceful, being in tune with nature. | ||
Not really. I mean, they would drive all the buffalo off cliffs. | ||
You're aware of that, right? | ||
They would bury people up to their neck in fire ant mounds. | ||
They would just do brutal things, like unspeakable things. | ||
Doesn't mean they deserved genocide, but they weren't genocide. | ||
They were slowly, slowly and over... | ||
Several centuries conquered piecemeal. | ||
I think if you want to get like kind of the best and worst of the Anglo slash just European diaspora versus natives, look at the founders of Texas. | ||
Because you had people like Davy Crockett who first came to prominence And people knew who he was, and he got elected to Congress based off of his participation in the war with the Creek Indians. | ||
He was a war hero, and he fought the Creeks because the Creeks were massacring settlers, killing women and children, burning down entire towns. | ||
So David Crockett signed up, went and fought those guys. | ||
But then later, when he was in Congress and was a Partisan of Andrew Jackson. | ||
Andrew Jackson wanted to go to war with a different tribe of Creeks. | ||
David Crockett refused to go. | ||
Actually ended up... That's why he came to Texas. | ||
Because he's like, I'm not going to stand for this. | ||
And all the Jacksonian partisans who he relied on for his political power turned on him. | ||
Basically, Andrew Jackson wants to go with these Creeks. | ||
You're on board or we're ousting you. | ||
And he's like, look, you're ousting me then. | ||
Because I'm not on board with this. | ||
Because the Creeks that I fought were the bad guys. | ||
Creek Indians that were burning villages, but these Creeks over here, they're doing what we say. | ||
They're agreeing to the terms of the treaty. | ||
They haven't attacked villagers, so they're not the same as these other guys that we fought over here and ended up, you know, resigning from it. | ||
He could have just gone along with it. | ||
Yeah, whatever. They're redskins. | ||
We'll just, we'll kill them all. Who cares? | ||
No, instead he said, screw that. | ||
You can all go to hell. I'm going to Texas. | ||
First president of Texas, Sam Houston, was called the Raven by the Cherokee chief that adopted him into the tribe. | ||
Because he went and lived with the Cherokee for a long time and basically became one, more or less. | ||
And part of the success of the... | ||
Well, part of the reason Texas was founded in the first place as an Anglo colony was because the Mexicans couldn't handle the natives in Texas. | ||
And then during the Texas Revolution, some of the tribes joined up with the Texians and were screwed over in a really brutal way. | ||
It was Sam Houston's vision that Texas would always have a population that was half Anglo, half Native American. | ||
That was undone by Marabu B. Lamar. | ||
And, you know, there are examples, a lot of them, throughout American history of the American people. | ||
Doing things like inviting all of the chiefs to a peace summit and then arresting or killing them all. | ||
But equally, there are examples of the opposite happening. | ||
So it's a messy business history, and to paint it as this black-and-white preschool lullaby version of the poor, innocent, care-bearer Native Americans being brutally attacked by people they had no chance against just isn't true. | ||
It's designed to demonize white people and uplift Native Americans, but to me it does the opposite and downplays and humiliates the Native Americans. | ||
In order to make a point, because these people don't actually care about the things they say they care about. | ||
But regardless of the truth or the lie, regardless of whether it was valid or justified or whether blah, blah, blah, it doesn't even matter. | ||
The fact is that we have a presidential candidate in Kamala Harris who is very deliberately and very hatefully blood libeling The founders and the population of the country she's trying to be president of. | ||
And trying to tell us that we should be sorry and regretful for the glorious achievements of our forefathers. | ||
That is ridiculous. | ||
No other ethnicity or race even thinks about doing that. | ||
When the reality is that things have been done by the likes of Genghis Khan or the Chorismian Shah or the whatever Zulu chieftain outstrip Europeans in terms of brutality and barbarism and death and destruction and disease by a factor of 10. | ||
So stuff it, lady. | ||
So just shut up. You can shut up now. | ||
It's fine to celebrate your heroes. | ||
It's good to celebrate your heroes. | ||
It's almost necessary to celebrate your heroes. | ||
The President of the United States trying to demonize the founder of America, she can go to hell. | ||
unidentified
|
You're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Back to The American Journal. | ||
Took a little detour. | ||
Talk about Columbus. I'm going to get back on track now. | ||
Talk about, you know, there's politics going on. | ||
Politics going on all over the place. | ||
We have to deal with it. I'm also going to open up the phone lines for your calls for the final hour of today's program. | ||
Give us a call at 1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
Open lines, give us a call about whatever you want. | ||
It's been a while since I've heard from the audience. | ||
What have I missed over the last two weeks? | ||
What are your thoughts on Columbus Day? | ||
Just give us a call. We'd love to hear from you. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
I have some videos to go to here of J.D. Vance, who people actually doubted. | ||
You remember that? Remember people doubted him? | ||
I actually went back to the show that we did right after he picked J.D. Vance, and I realized I need to be more forceful at times. | ||
So I don't want to, you know, I'm not like a... | ||
At the end of the day, I'm... | ||
I'm but a humble... | ||
Dude, right, I don't think I know more than anybody else necessarily, and I'm willing to be open to other ideas. | ||
And so at the time, if you remember, when the J.D. Vance was picked, a huge portion of the right wing was outraged. | ||
Thought he was a total plant, thought he was going to suck, thought he was a terrible idea, calling for him to be replaced. | ||
And so over the whole show, I'm sort of addressing those complaints and And saying, yeah, but who's better? | ||
Really, who else do you want? | ||
Like, you want some sort of mythical, perfect vice president of Canada that doesn't exist. | ||
J.D. Vance is not just the best on offer, but like so much better than anybody else by a country mile. | ||
I mean, what are you even complaining about? | ||
Watching it back, I was kind of annoyed at myself. | ||
Just going, yeah, well, why even? | ||
We just knew. He should have come out and said, yeah, J.D. Vance was a great choice. | ||
He was great. He was perfect. | ||
Everybody decrying him or second-guessing him is wrong. | ||
And I should have just left it at that. | ||
So I'm going to try to take that lesson on and just come out and say these things because they're obviously true. | ||
J.D. Vance was obviously a fantastic choice and he's proving it over and over again. | ||
From Gateway Pundit, more JD mastery. | ||
Vance embarrasses left as New York Times reporter while delivering an important history lesson when she tries to claim illegals are needed to build houses. | ||
So let's go to that video. | ||
Clip number 11 here. | ||
unidentified
|
The reason that there is a housing crisis is that not enough houses have been built. | |
And that we have 25 million people who shouldn't be here. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I mean, this is the thing. | |
I think it's both. I know you do. | ||
I don't think that many people who look into this agree with you. | ||
But about a third of the construction workforce in this country is Hispanic. | ||
Of those, a large proportion are undocumented. | ||
So how do you propose to build all the housing necessary that we need in this country by removing all the people who are working in construction? | ||
I think it's a fair question because we know that back in the 1960s when we had very low levels of illegal immigration, Americans didn't buy houses, didn't build houses. | ||
But of course they did. | ||
And I'm being sarcastic, of course, in service of a point, Lulu, the assumption that because A large number of home builders now are using undocumented labor, that that's the only way to build homes. | ||
unidentified
|
I think, again, betrays a fundamental- The country is much bigger. | |
The need is much bigger. | ||
I mean, I'm not arguing in favor of illegal immigration. | ||
I'm asking how you would deal with the knock-on effect of your proposal to remove millions of people who work in a critical part of the economy. | ||
Well, I think that what you would do is you would take, let's say, for example, the 7 million prime-age men who have dropped out of the labor force. | ||
And you have a smaller number of women, but still millions of women prime-age who have dropped out of the labor force. | ||
You absolutely could re-engage folks into the American labor market. | ||
unidentified
|
To work in construction? | |
Of course you could. I mean, the unemployment rate is 4.1%. | ||
But the unemployment rate, Lulu, this is important. | ||
unidentified
|
But most people who don't work can't work in the regular economy. | |
They're in the military. They're parents. | ||
They're sick. They're old. | ||
They might not want to work in construction. | ||
The unemployment rate is... | ||
It does not count labor force participation dropouts. | ||
And again, this is one of the really deranged things that I think illegal immigration does to our society, is it gets us in a mindset of saying, we can only build houses with illegal immigrants when we have 7 million, just men, not even women, just men who have completely dropped out of the labor force. | ||
People say, well, Americans won't do those jobs. | ||
Americans won't do those jobs for We're good to go. | ||
Sometimes people who may be struggling with addiction or trauma get them reengaged in American society. | ||
We cannot have an entire American business community that is giving up on American workers and then importing millions of illegal laborers. | ||
That is what we have thanks to Kamala Harris's border policies. | ||
I think it's one of the biggest drivers of inequality. | ||
It's one of the biggest reasons why we have millions of people who have dropped out of the labor force. | ||
Why try to reengage an American citizen in a good job if you can just import somebody from Central America who's going to work under the table for poverty wages? | ||
It is a disgrace, and it has led to the evisceration of the American middle class. | ||
Yeah, a very masterful response, I think, by J.D. Vance. | ||
There's so many aspects to this that are Nonsense. | ||
That are just pure nonsense. | ||
The woman's like, obviously J.D. Vance makes the sarcastic point that before there was a massive amount of illegal immigration in the 1960s, Americans didn't build houses, right? | ||
Not only did they build houses, the houses that they built are still standing and will last longer than the houses that are being built today by slave labor imported over the southern border and the You know, incredibly shoddy material and craftsmanship and workmanship that's going into it. | ||
So, obviously that's absurd. | ||
And her response to that is, well, it's a bigger country now. | ||
That literally, it just doesn't mean anything. | ||
That means nothing. It's also a much bigger country because we've been massively importing foreigners to the tune of tens of millions. | ||
Every couple of years for the last several decades. | ||
So that might be one of the reasons it's bigger. | ||
And of course there's a housing crisis. | ||
It's making houses more expensive. | ||
Due in part to the tens of millions of illegals that have come across their border. | ||
But we need them to build houses to deal with the housing crisis. | ||
Do you see where this is not solving the problem? | ||
This is not complicated. | ||
And this is one of the things about the conversation, the controversy, the distinction between whether all of this is being done on purpose or out of incompetence. | ||
The Democrats are pretending to be dumb in a lot of times. | ||
I mean, don't get me wrong. | ||
They are dumb. They don't have to pretend very hard, but they understand why 30 to 50 million immigrants in a single presidential administration would raise house prices. | ||
Unless they, I mean, if they don't understand that, we got a problem. | ||
We got a really big problem. But they do understand. | ||
Obviously, they understand. It's not hard to understand. | ||
They understand extremely sophisticated chain of causation when they want to, when it behooves them. | ||
The example I used on Twitter is just one, but there's a lot of others you can think of. | ||
Where if you ask a leftist about a hurricane, they can explain to you how You driving your car puts out carbon which contributes to greenhouse gases and the greenhouse effect will heat the earth and the rising temperatures will heat the ocean waters and the higher temperatures in the ocean water will create stronger hurricanes like they understand this very convoluted and nonsensical and by the way false chain of events | ||
So that, you know, your gas stove is responsible for hurricanes happening in Florida. | ||
For some reason they can't figure out how 50 million new people in three years would raise house prices. | ||
A much less complicated chain of events. | ||
Oh, 50 million people show up? | ||
That puts a lot of pressure on the housing market. | ||
So prices go up. | ||
It's extremely simple. | ||
Straightforward. Obvious. | ||
They're pretending to not understand this. | ||
And the way they pretend to not understand it is to extrapolate what's being said, to build a totally outrageous straw man, and then argue against that. | ||
And so when you say, hey, if you want to deal with a housing problem, Prices being too high. | ||
One of the main things you could do is mass deportations, shut down the immigration influx. | ||
Their response is always, oh, so everything's the immigrants' fault. | ||
You're just blaming everything. | ||
So every house price is up because of immigrants. | ||
That's what you're saying? It's like, no, obviously it's not what we're saying. | ||
They... They're losing right now, and they're going to lose eventually because you can't pretend to be this dumb forever. | ||
At a certain point, it's going to either be obvious that you're deceitful and people are going to stop trusting you, or the lie is just going to collapse, or the effect of the lie is going to cause a greater collapse. | ||
You can ignore the obvious problem for a while, but eventually it's going to become insurmountable. | ||
And we're all going to suffer from it. | ||
suffer because of it. | ||
There's so many issues in America that... | ||
event. | ||
you I don't even know. | ||
Not only are the illegal immigrants... | ||
The cause of or an exacerbating factor for a lot of the problems that we Americans are experiencing. | ||
The leftists actually promoting illegal immigration as a solution to these problems. | ||
If you really think about that, about what that means, like that is the encapsulation of the leftist sort of communistic Deconstructionist, anti-white, whatever you want to call it. | ||
That mindset is sort of best embodied in an example like Springfield, Ohio. | ||
Where if you look at Springfield, Ohio before the Haitians ever got there and you see the problems in this community where you've got Overdoses and addiction to drugs and you've got an economic downturn and the closing of necessary industries that propped up the whole community. | ||
So you have the community disintegrating and you have people who can't find jobs having to go on welfare. | ||
I mean, it's just you have problem after problem. | ||
And just imagine the type of mindset that would look at a small town that used to be thriving, that through no fault of their own, because of free trade agreements or Restrictive regulations have their source of income shut down, have their community that they've built for generation upon generation collapsing. | ||
Again, through no fault, not because they did anything wrong, not because they all went crazy, not because they all got lazy all of a sudden, but the things outside of their control, in the control of the government for the most part, you go and you see all of these issues in this community and And your solution to this is to bring 20,000 Haitians to subsidize their paychecks, | ||
to subsidize their rent, pay their rent to the government, to give them every freebie and shortcut To replace the people in Springfield, Ohio. | ||
It's such a sick mindset. | ||
Such a bizarre mindset. | ||
You just have to realize they don't see what's happening in Springfield, Ohio as a problem to be solved for the benefit of the people in Ohio. | ||
They see it as a vulnerability to attack through mass immigration in this bioweapon of third world immigrants. | ||
And that might be the sort of defining difference between where you fall in the political spectrum. | ||
When you see a sad, getting sadder story of a small town in America, are you of the inclination that says we have to solve the problems that created this issue? | ||
We have to stop offshoring our manufacturing. | ||
We have to stop destroying small businesses with government regulation. | ||
We have to Actually empower and help build up the people in this forgotten town? | ||
Or are you the type of person that says, what a brilliant opening for me to flood in 10,000 Haitian migrants that are living off the government? | ||
And if you're in that latter category, if you're the type of person that sees a dying town and says, well, it's because these people are white and they deserve it, And now we'll do to them what we cry about them doing to us 400 years ago. | ||
So that's all that's happening here. | ||
Colonization. We're being colonized. | ||
You're a bad person. | ||
You're a bad person. It's not actually helping anybody. | ||
And are not just responsible for the problems that we're already trying to solve, but your solution to these problems are only making everything worse and creating a whole host of other problems. | ||
And one place to look at this, the devastating effects of absolutely everything Democrat, is of course, Aurora, Colorado. | ||
Apparently, Trump is saying that his new deportation campaign will be called Operation Aurora, which would be very appropriate. | ||
J.D. Vance, again, was asked by an ABC anchor about Trin de Aragua and Aurora, Colorado. | ||
And you have this incredible, this really is a very interesting exchange. | ||
Let's go now to clip number 12. Here's J.D. Vance with Martha Raddatz. | ||
unidentified
|
We played some other comments about migrants, including in Aurora, in Colorado, where Trump said the city had been invaded and conquered by Venezuelan gangs. | |
The Republican mayor of the city said flatly the city and state have not I understand what you're saying, that some people left behind, but he's making these statements that the mayor is flat-out disputing. | ||
Well, Martha, you just said the mayor said they were exaggerated. | ||
Grossly exaggerated. That means there's got to be some element of truth here. | ||
And of course, President Trump was actually in Aurora, Colorado, talking to people on the ground. | ||
And what we're hearing, of course, Martha, is that people are terrified by what has happened with some of these Venezuelan gangs. | ||
unidentified
|
Senator Vance, I'm going to stop you because I know exactly what happened. | |
I'm going to stop you. The incidents were limited to a handful of apartment complexes, and the mayor said our dedicated police officers have acted on those concerns. | ||
A handful of problems. | ||
Only, Martha, do you hear yourself? | ||
Only a handful of apartment complexes in America were taken over by Venezuelan gangs and Donald Trump is the problem and not Kamala Harris' open border. | ||
Americans are so fed up with what's going on and they have every right to be. | ||
And I really find this exchange, Martha, sort of interesting because you seem to be more focused With nitpicking everything that Donald Trump has said, rather than acknowledging that apartment complexes in the United States of America are being taken over by violent gangs. | ||
I worry so much more about that problem than anything else here. | ||
We've got to get American communities in a safe space again, and unfortunately when you let people in by the millions Most of whom are unvetted, most of whom you don't know who they really are, you're going to have problems like this. | ||
Kamala Harris, 94 executive orders that undid Donald Trump's successful border policies. | ||
We knew this stuff would happen. | ||
They dragged about opening the border, and now we have the consequences, and we're living with it. | ||
We can do so much better, but frankly, we're not going to do better, Martha, unless Donald Trump calls this stuff out. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm glad that he did. Okay, let's just end that with they did not invade or take over the city, as Donald Trump said. | |
I want to move on to women. | ||
Just a few apartment complexes, no big deal. | ||
unidentified
|
A few apartment complexes that the mayor did not seem was invading the entire city. | |
I mean, do I need to walk you through this? | ||
I mean, it just should be, I guess I do, because this is an ABC News anchor saying this. | ||
Is it complicated what's going on here? | ||
No, absolutely not. | ||
It's very simple. She's lying. | ||
She's lying. And it's just what they do. | ||
It's just the same thing over and over. | ||
Donald Trump says they're invading. | ||
They're taking over. Taking over apartment complexes. | ||
And they're invading. Of course they are. | ||
Look at the Haitians. 20,000 to a population of 50,000 in just one town. | ||
And that's just one town. I mean, it's happening in hundreds and hundreds. | ||
And of course, there's videos of the takeovers. | ||
This is actively happening, and it's getting worse, and there's more people arriving every day. | ||
The invasion is ongoing. | ||
And so they take that statement from Donald Trump, take it to its most extreme and illiberal interpretation, and say Donald Trump claimed that the entire town of Aurora, Colorado has been totally taken over, and it's all Venezuelans now, and that's just simply not true. | ||
Okay, but he never said that, so what are you fact-checking, and you admit that he's right about what he's saying, and it is just, I don't even have to add it to you, it's absurd that they're like, well, it's just a few apartment buildings. | ||
Alright, so what's the issue? What is the issue here? | ||
Donald Trump says they're taking over apartment buildings in Aurora, Colorado. | ||
And they're like, that's totally false. | ||
That's totally wrong. | ||
Grossly exaggerated. They are taking over a couple apartment buildings. | ||
They have taken over a couple apartment buildings in Aurora, Colorado. | ||
That is true. 100% every word of what he said was by force. | ||
Absolutely. 100% true, without a doubt. | ||
But I'm outraged that he would say it. | ||
Like, what are you even talking about? | ||
unidentified
|
It would be one thing if they took over apartment complexes by buying them out or fixing them up. | |
No, no, no, no. I had a skit idea while I was out. | ||
I can't remember what it was. | ||
I wrote down a note that was like, it turns out the Venezuelans are the best landlords in Aurora or something. | ||
I don't know. I jotted it down. | ||
What's that? We're going to be busy today. | ||
Yeah, I just think it'd be... | ||
I don't know. I bet people have had some landlords that you wouldn't mind if Trin de Aragua had their way with them. | ||
Maybe they're just doing what they're supposed to do. | ||
So, I mean, it's just absurd. | ||
And the most absurd part of it... | ||
No, no, there's not. | ||
There's not a most absurd. It's all absurd. | ||
It's all completely absurd. Obviously, this is happening. | ||
Obviously, it's been happening. They do this. | ||
They do this thing. And I talked about it. | ||
I think on the last show before I went on break, we need a word for this. | ||
We need a phrase to encapsulate this. | ||
We're leftists, liberals, whatever, the enemy. | ||
The enemy takes some random person supposedly in a position of authority. | ||
It doesn't matter who they are or if they're in a real position. | ||
It doesn't matter. They take one of their statements and then that's it. | ||
That is the gospel truth and anything that contradicts that is to be thrown out because after all, the mayor said it was grossly exaggerated. | ||
The mayor admits that they're taking over apartment buildings. | ||
The mayor admits that they're swamped and can't handle the influx. | ||
All of these other things are absolutely true. | ||
But because they got the mayor at one point to say, well, it's grossly exaggerated, then that's it. | ||
That's it. That's all. | ||
Remember, with the Haitians. | ||
Well, the city manager said that there were no credible reports of Haitian migrants kidnapping and eating pets. | ||
So therefore, we don't have to worry about all of the problems that are being caused by the deliberate importation of tens of thousands of Haitian migrants. | ||
And they'll just say it over and over. | ||
And it's just, it's, again, I just, I can't help but think, like, what's going on in the leftist mind is, like, they start hearing Donald Trump talk about Haitians eating cats, talking about Trinde Aragua taking over apartment buildings. | ||
By the way, one of the reasons that they're desperate to distract and discredit this argument is because it resonates with black people. | ||
By the way, in case you didn't realize, black people are not exactly happy about their communities being taken over by Venezuelan gang members. | ||
And so the media is very desperate to distract from this fact because it's hurting them with their constituency that normally votes 90% in their favor. | ||
And we'll get back to this on the other side. | ||
I see the phone lines are full, so we will go to you in just a moment. | ||
But the management companies themselves have come out and said, yes, this is a major issue. | ||
Trump's exactly right. This is a problem in Aurora. | ||
unidentified
|
Taking a record of the hearts and minds of the American people, it's the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Welcome back, folks. I'm all mixed up. | ||
I'm so not used to this lack of commercial breaks. | ||
I was thinking I had another segment for the third hour. | ||
Obviously, the third hour is on now here on the American Journal. | ||
But in this short five-minute segment, you know what? | ||
I guess I will just finish up with this and then go out to your phone calls in the next segment. | ||
This is a short segment here. | ||
But I think I can wrap it up here because an organization called CBZ Management has come out. | ||
And told the real story of what's happening in Aurora, Colorado with Trendy Aragua. | ||
This is the management company that owns the apartment buildings that are being taken over by illegals. | ||
They posted this with a video. | ||
We'll go now to clip number four. | ||
This is what they posted on X earlier this week. | ||
Let's watch. See if you can find that story on the Venezuelan gangs taking over the apartment building in Colorado. | ||
unidentified
|
We have new information on what we've learned is happening inside an apartment complex. | |
This video shows armed men walking through a building, knocking on doors, and entering an apartment. | ||
The apartment complex is at 12th and Dallas in Aurora. | ||
In doing so, I've taken over several apartment complexes. | ||
Venezuelan gangs are taking over the real estate. | ||
They're becoming real estate developers. | ||
And they have... Do they get little cards? | ||
unidentified
|
Their little card is a bullet. | |
Yes! Kamala Harris will work to deliver on that and secure the border. | ||
Who's to blame? Carousel, if you will, continues. | ||
The city says the property management team is simply not doing enough to help these residents. | ||
In an interview with that property management team last week, they say that that building is actually being controlled by a certain gang and they feel helpless. | ||
There's nothing they can do about it. | ||
They've, in fact, have kind of pushed out the property management through intimidation and then collected the rents. | ||
Arrests have been made, but these operations are still ongoing. | ||
So there you go. | ||
By CBZ Management, they say gangs have taken control of several of our properties in Aurora, Colorado. | ||
In an attempt to discredit this fact for political purposes and avoid government accountability, some have spread false information about the situation. | ||
Let's set the record straight. | ||
They say we started managing the buildings when the new owners acquired the Colorado properties in 2019. | ||
At the time, the properties were in poor condition and our mission was to renovate them, thereby increasing their value. | ||
This was an ambitious project that would significantly benefit the people of Aurora while providing returns to the new owners. | ||
We understood this project would take years to yield results and would be both time-consuming and costly, involving comprehensive upgrades to every unit and the overall structure. | ||
We undertook a complete renovation of nearly every unit in the now well-known building that you've seen in the news. | ||
Everything was progressing smoothly, property values were rising, and vacancy rates were dropping as a win-win for both the owners and the city of Aurora. | ||
Then the gangs arrived. | ||
Yes, again, through no fault of their own, despite putting in the time and effort and money to. | ||
you Try to improve the life of the actual American citizens there. | ||
They were undercut, undermined, had their efforts destroyed by the government itself importing foreigners so they could steal your tax money. | ||
After some time, we noticed a rise in crime and tenant complaints. | ||
The most alarming moment occurred when our local CBZ representative was attacked at the end of 2023. | ||
He had gone to inspect a recently vacated three-bedroom apartment, a rare occurrence for such a large unit, only to find a group of men already inside. | ||
When he refused their $500 bribe to overlook the situation, they brutally attacked him. | ||
This photo was taken shortly after he escaped, just before being admitted to the hospital. | ||
The video footage comes from one of our security cameras capturing part of the assault. | ||
Okay, so this is when it, like, first gets going. | ||
After the attack on our CBZ representative, he began getting threatening text messages. | ||
We also frequently found people illegally occupying newly vacated apartments during scheduled tours. | ||
This was initially attributed to an influx of migrants exploiting squatter laws. | ||
We even received a call from a tenant returning from vacation only to find strangers living in his apartment. | ||
This legitimate tenant was forced to find a new home after police couldn't help him. | ||
And of course, this is what they're teaching each other to do. | ||
We've shown you the TikToks of Venezuelans saying, here's how you use squatter rights to steal apartments from Americans. | ||
This is happening, and now the apartment building complex management company has come out and laid out the entire timeline. | ||
You can find it on their X account at CBZ Management. | ||
They posted this on October 11th and talked about just the trials and tribulations they've been put through by Kamala Harris and her open border policies. | ||
It's all real, folks, obviously. | ||
unidentified
|
It always was. You're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Alright, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
To your calls now. Tim in Seattle wants to talk about Vim Miller. | ||
V-E-M Miller. | ||
A name I've never heard before. | ||
Though I do love the word Vim. | ||
It means energy. Tim in Seattle, thank you for calling in. | ||
Go ahead, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
How's it going, Harrison? Glad to have you back. | |
Congratulations on your third child. | ||
Thank you. Proud of you, brother. | ||
So, Femm Miller, apparently this is a big misunderstanding. | ||
The sheriff made a mistake. | ||
He's been released on bail. | ||
He's already put out a statement. | ||
Ivan Rankin, who I would assume is a Trump supporter, and National File, who also I would assume are Trump supporters, are already posting links exonerating them. | ||
I just was hoping that you guys could cover this and kind of... | ||
Just put some clarity to the issue, because I don't think that Vim is the type of person to try to assassinate Trump. | ||
I've been on his show twice. | ||
I was on his show last month. | ||
He didn't seem like the type. | ||
So, yeah, he's got a podcast called Blood Money. | ||
Talented, smart individual. | ||
He's a patriot. And so it sounds like a setup. | ||
It sounds like as if they're just looking for some hype and some sensationalism. | ||
Maybe jump the gun, but hopefully you guys can figure it out. | ||
Yeah, and maybe just, you know, like, sort of being, like, too hyper-vigilant, where, like, they're blowing up this thing that was really nothing, and so then next time it happens, people go, ah, well, it's just happening again. | ||
You know, maybe tomorrow it'll be another Trump assassination attempt, and it turns out not to be real. | ||
And then, like, when a real assassination attempt happens, everybody just sort of shrugs because we keep hearing it over and over. | ||
It's like the boy who cried wolf. | ||
Yeah, it's very interesting. Apparently he made a documentary that he released on October 4th called Bundy vs. | ||
the Deep State, the murder of Mike Little. | ||
So people are speculating that he's being set up because he was exposing what happened with the Bundy Ranch, which I believe is what that documentary is about. | ||
Yeah, apparently he's on X, if this is him, I assume it is, at Not Vim Miller, the America Happens Network. | ||
So, I mean, that was my... | ||
That was my supposition. | ||
That was my guess reading about this guy. | ||
He's like a sovereign citizen. | ||
He told the police that he had guns. | ||
And this got blown up into an assassination attempt. | ||
But just reading the initial report, I was like, this guy sounds normal and cool. | ||
So I'm glad that my supervision is still intact. | ||
Just seeing the truth. | ||
Without any inside information, just being able to understand what is being said. | ||
So you've been on his show, Tim? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I've been on his show twice. | |
I was on his show as Bill Gates. | ||
If you go to my X account, we did some parody of me putting on a Bill Gates mask and trying to microchip everybody. | ||
So we then interviewed Bill Gates in front of the Gates Foundation for about 45 minutes or so. | ||
And like last year, I did a podcast with him and whatnot. | ||
Again, he's super solid. | ||
You should try to have him on the show, reach out, and try to exonerate him. | ||
Here's a conspiracy theory for you, Tim. | ||
Is this a brilliant publicity stunt? | ||
Will people now tune in to his podcast and watch his documentary? | ||
Because he is now a nationally known figure after this arrest. | ||
How deep does the rabbit hole go, Tim? | ||
I'm joking, but... If I was this guy, Vim, assuming he doesn't go to jail for having guns in California, that seems like it might be a positive. | ||
Seems like he might have more eyes on his podcast, more name recognition now than before, and he doesn't seem to have done anything wrong, really. | ||
Certainly did not try to assassinate Trump, as it's being reported. | ||
So, very interesting, and we'll see what comes of this. | ||
And I do want to get this guy on. | ||
He's got 17,000 followers on X, which is pretty good, pretty sizable following. | ||
And he hosts the Blood Money Podcast. | ||
So I never heard of it, but sounds interesting. | ||
And we share guests. | ||
So connection there. | ||
Thank you so much for that information, Tim. | ||
And I'm getting more information, too, as time goes on from other people. | ||
Saying largely the same thing. | ||
This guy is being set up. | ||
Or he's just a good guy and isn't who people think that he is. | ||
In fact, it looks like he was, I assume this is his video, he was interviewing Matt Taibbi at the Rage Against the War Machine rally in Washington, D.C., So clearly not. | ||
I mean, from everything I'm seeing from his X feed, he's a Trump supporter. | ||
He's almost certainly a Trump supporter. | ||
He is certainly not a deep state operative. | ||
With that, we go to the next call. | ||
Jerry in Indiana wants to talk about Columbus Day. | ||
Thank you for calling in. Jerry, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Harris. It's so good to talk to you, Mark. | |
I'm a big fan of yours. Good to hear from you. | ||
And congratulations on your third kid. | ||
Thank you. Also, well, Columbus Day... | ||
I live here in Indiana, and Indiana means like the land of the Indians here. | ||
Right. It's kind of shameful how our presidential candidate Kamala Harris is just trashing it. | ||
That's what I think of it. | ||
Yeah, what do you think about that? | ||
It was, you know, I wish I could remember who said it, but I just heard somebody talking about this going, you know, why are they pretending that these Indians were peaceful and hippies and they never hurt anybody and they never knew violence or sickness? | ||
It's like, no, don't disrespect them. | ||
They were worthy opponents. | ||
They were warriors. And we went head to head and we came out on top, but... | ||
You know, there's a reason why we name our sports teams after them. | ||
We honor them. We appreciate them. | ||
We weren't massacring a bunch of little villagers. | ||
We were going head-to-head against a powerful and, you know, dangerous enemy. | ||
I mean, what's your take on that aspect of what Kamala Harris was saying? | ||
unidentified
|
To me, it's like the professional victim mentality. | |
You have to understand that liberals like to play on everybody. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
100%. And you know, we're showing video of NFL teams banging the big war drum. | ||
Again, people act like this is mocking them or something. | ||
No, this is cool. | ||
It's celebrating them. | ||
And there's that classic image where it's the red skin logo, but it says Caucasian or it says white, pale face or whatever. | ||
And it's like, how would you feel? | ||
It's like... Fine, I want that shirt. | ||
That's awesome, actually. | ||
That's super cool and dope. | ||
So what are you talking about? Why are you so, I don't know, self-conscious? | ||
Where it's like, yeah, they're putting me... | ||
In fact, the model, I think of the Redskin logo... | ||
I think he's still alive. | ||
I didn't read the story, but did y'all see that? | ||
Where the model that actually the redskin logo was painted to look like was like, why'd you take my face off? | ||
I was the logo. | ||
That was awesome. Yeah, this is cool. | ||
So don't let them make you think that you can't be treated like other human beings. | ||
You're a human being, Native Americans. | ||
You're a human being, black people. | ||
And you don't need to be coddled like a child because we respect you more than that. | ||
Thank you for the call, Jerry. Let's go to some other callers about Columbus. | ||
David in Alberta is calling about Columbus propaganda. | ||
Go ahead, David. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi, Harrison. Good to have you back, and congratulations on your new audition. | |
Thank you. This is the first time caller. | ||
I've been listening to you guys for about 15 years, so I feel like I won the lottery getting on. | ||
But anyway, yeah, they've been lying to us since birth, it seems, about everything that's mainstream. | ||
About understanding about facts. | ||
They call it facts, but everything they talk about seems to be coming up to be a lie that I was told since birth has been proving to be a lie. | ||
Why wouldn't they lie to us about our history as well? | ||
Which they have. | ||
If you look through history, you can prove, for example, how the World War started. | ||
They're all lies. So how about our history in Columbus? | ||
I mean, hats off to the guy if he was real, if he actually existed. | ||
But let's talk about the Tartarian era. | ||
You probably have, maybe, or you have, Harrison, on your programs. | ||
But have you considered the Tartarian era and the unanswered questions around these beautiful, magnificent buildings that were proving to be like 300 years old, and they claim they were, oh no, those things were put up in one year, and they're only about 100 years old, but they can't explain away the intricate carvings on these things that supposedly were done by hand. | ||
And these buildings, these magnificent buildings exist in almost every town, city, right across North America, and they can't explain. | ||
Yeah, look, I'm not trying to cut you off, David. | ||
I want to keep talking to you. | ||
I don't believe in the Tartarian mud flood theory. | ||
I don't think that's valid. | ||
I think history very accurately, for the most part, explains the big picture stuff, the movement of people and everything that matters at the end of the day. | ||
I don't think that the pictures of the old buildings are proof that some civilization existed here before. | ||
Part of it In a way, kind of like the moon landing conspiracies or the flat earth conspiracies. | ||
It's like Do you think maybe the conspiracy is that they want you to think that humans aren't capable of this? | ||
That the fact that humans can so, you know, create these incredible buildings with the intricate carvings, and yet they did it without computers, without planning, without anything but a chisel and a hammer, that that's real? | ||
And that what they're trying to do by claiming it's some ancient civilization with lost technology is to... | ||
Make you think that humans aren't as powerful or skilled as they really are. | ||
That's the idea I get from it. | ||
Same thing with the moon landing theory. | ||
If this was our greatest achievement ever, But you've got a bunch of people going, no, actually, we never did that. | ||
Humans never left the planet. | ||
No, we suck. We can't build things like we used to. | ||
It's impossible. In fact, we never could build those things. | ||
We never could get to the moon. | ||
We never did anything. | ||
And everything that's amazing and glorious and grand must be evidence of aliens or a dead civilization. | ||
I mean, what's wrong with humanity just being awesome and able to build... | ||
Amazing things and, you know, settling in an unconquered land. | ||
You know, What is the point of the Tartarian conspiracy theory? | ||
Although I do like this, David, because it's not an angle I was thinking about with Columbus. | ||
So is it y'all's contention that when Europeans arrived in America, there was already cities established that then the settlers pretended to build themselves? | ||
Is that your contention there? | ||
unidentified
|
This is sort of what the evidence points to. | |
I mean... You stand at one of these buildings, you look up at it, and they say, oh yeah, that was put up in a year, and the intricate hand-carved objects on either side of a massive doorway are identical, and it was all hand-carved. | ||
And then you say, oh yeah, we put that up in a year. | ||
And then yet people in images of those buildings years ago, they're running around on dirt streets in horse and buggy and living in a log cabin. | ||
But these buildings were put up in a year? | ||
I mean, you know, I agree with you. | ||
I agree. You know, mankind is very capable. | ||
Absolutely. But don't tell me you put that up in a year. | ||
I don't know, man. I mean, look at, you know, here's a great example. | ||
In Baltimore, the ship ran into the bridge and it collapsed. | ||
And it's been a year or more. | ||
When did that happen? I mean, it's been at least a year. | ||
Right? Oh my god, time is just lost for me. | ||
Has it been six months? I think it's been a year, right? | ||
Or has it been six months? Anyway, either way, it's been either six months or a year. | ||
Not only has the bridge not been built, it was last week that they finally removed the bridge that collapsed. | ||
They finally got the detritus out of the water. | ||
After six months or a year or however long it's been. | ||
Meanwhile, in Florida, a bridge was taken out in a hurricane and Ron Sanders had it rebuilt in 48 hours. | ||
So it was in March of this year. | ||
Okay. So yeah, so from March to now, not only have they not rebuilt the bridge, they have just now taken the collapsed, destroyed bridge out of the water and finally cleared the pathway. | ||
While in Florida, they can rebuild an entire bridge from scratch in 48 hours. | ||
So, you know, You could look at that and go, how are you telling me they built a bridge in 48 hours when it's been six months and they haven't even started rebuilding the Baltimore one? | ||
It's like, well, it's a matter of effort. | ||
It's a matter of energy. It's a matter of organization. | ||
It's a matter of... And all that is dependent on resources, right? | ||
How did the Egyptians build such incredible monuments? | ||
Truly mind-blowing, like the level of perfection, exactitude. | ||
I mean, it's... That stuff is sort of inexplicable to me. | ||
And we still have monuments that we can't exactly explain how it happened. | ||
It's a matter of having an incredibly bountiful harvest, an incredibly large and fit population with not a lot of places to go, not a lot of stuff to do, not a lot of other lands nearby to conquer, and an extremely efficient and effective priest class to organize and instruct them on what to do. | ||
So, you know, it's... It's about where you put your resources. | ||
So, you know, at the same time that we're building skyscrapers that are impossible to even imagine from 100 years ago or 200 years ago, and we still have people living in cardboard boxes. | ||
We still have people living in log cabins. | ||
I mean, these things aren't mutually exclusive, right? | ||
unidentified
|
True, true. I mean, I'm from the construction industry, and they can barely put up an ugly square box in a year. | |
Never mind one of these intricate buildings. | ||
So, I mean, it just doesn't add up in my practical mind that the story they're telling is true. | ||
Like, the pyramids is a classic example, right? | ||
I mean, there's no way even today, with the technology you have today, could put something up that perfectly. | ||
I mean, you can't even get a playing card between those blocks. | ||
But they were all chiseled all by hand. | ||
I mean, come on. I mean, so they've lied to us about everything since birth. | ||
They've lied to us about everything. | ||
Why wouldn't they lie to us about our history and our origin? | ||
That's my point, Harrison. | ||
I agree. I totally agree. | ||
I think they have lied to us about our history, and I think there are things that are unexplained by conventional science, and I think the things you're pointing out are very much in that realm. | ||
I just think there's, you know... | ||
There's part of me that thinks, okay, instead of being able to recognize the Like, how far humanity's fallen, that we can't make the things that we could make 100 years ago. | ||
It's better for the people who have caused our fall for us to think, well, it's because we never could do that in the first place. | ||
It's not that we have fallen so far. | ||
It's not that our organization is so dysfunctional now that we can't, as you point out, put together a simple house when our ancestors were, like, for fun putting up, you know, marble facades for the World Fair that they just took down because it was so easy for them. | ||
It's like... They would rather us think, like, no, all that is false, all that's fake. | ||
So I do think our history is not fully understood. | ||
I do think that there are technologies and techniques and powers that humanity had tapped into a long time ago that we have forgotten about or have been hidden from us. | ||
I think Tartaria is a distraction from the truth of that, though. | ||
I think Tartaria... Takes people, takes their eyes off the bullseye and sends them down rabbit holes for which there is no end. | ||
But thank you for the call and an interesting take of Columbus Day that I hadn't thought about. | ||
And by the way, some of the more credible people like Graham Hancock will talk about the cities in the Amazon that were like as big as London and there were hundreds of them at the time. | ||
Or the mound building cultures in the Mississippi Valley here in America that are not well understood. | ||
And those things are real and deserve investigation. | ||
But it wasn't the Chicago World Fair. | ||
It wasn't the San Francisco World Fair that is going to get you to the bottom of that, in my opinion. | ||
I have looked into it. Thank you for the call. | ||
Let's go to Steve in Alaska now. | ||
Go ahead, Steve, you're on the air. All right, hold on real quick. | ||
We're sticking with Columbus Day callers here. | ||
Steve, can you hear me? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, sir, I was fumbling my phone. | |
Sorry about that. So there's this thing, it's called history, right, which is comprised of two words, his story. | ||
And it's always made up by the victor. | ||
That doesn't mean it's necessarily the truth. | ||
And when you start looking into other cultures, and you go into these other cultures, because I am white, and I got invited to go sweat with some friends that were actually Native American, and I got to learn about their culture, then people were warriors, man. | ||
unidentified
|
And when you try to denigrate them by making up all of these fallacies about them being like you were saying earlier, like these peace loving style hippie type cultures, you're actually denigrating them. | |
You are degrading them, their memory, their culture. | ||
And I don't know if that's worse than being what they term as a culture vulture, or if that is just, I don't know. | ||
It's just foul in my opinion. | ||
I agree. | ||
Columbus Day, Columbus Day, no don't get me wrong, some of the stuff he probably did according to today's standards is wrong. | ||
However, back in those days, things were way more brutal than they are now. | ||
People were less civilized. | ||
And that's just the way it is. | ||
Don't judge them by today's so-called moral standards and values. | ||
judged them with an open mind according to the times that they were living in. | ||
Right, and even if you are judging them by today's values, judge everybody by today's values. | ||
Judge the Native American, judge the Aztecs by today's values. Do they pass muster or, you know, are they worse than Columbus by every measure, right? So I agree with you, but it's like, okay, not only do you not want to judge Columbus by today's standards, if you are going to do that, then judge the Indians too and, you know, keep the playing field level. The reason they don't, obviously, is because there's a political and, you know, | ||
globalist agenda behind their portrayal of Columbus. But sorry to interrupt, Steve. | ||
unidentified
|
It has to do with them keeping all of the ethnicity separated. | |
And, you know, let's call a spade a spade. | ||
There's one human race. | ||
We're just different colors, different levels of melanin in our skin. | ||
And in the end, if we ever get over that hump of division, Due to cultural differences, skin color, whatever it is, the globalists are going to be in trouble. | ||
And I pray that day, honestly, I really do, because I don't want to judge a man because he's black. | ||
I want to judge him by his character. | ||
I don't want to judge him because he's brown, and I don't want them to judge me because I'm white. | ||
I want them to judge me for my character and how I treat them. | ||
Hopefully people start looking less at history and looking more in our own backyard and start to question some of these things and figure out how we can get over that hump and come together as a human culture. | ||
You know, you're right. | ||
Although you're right on an individual level, I sort of disagree with you on... | ||
On the fact that our differences are merely skin color. | ||
I think it's deeper than that and I think the deception that we have to get out from under is that differences means worse somehow or that it's bad to say some things. | ||
We talk about other cultures like when COVID broke out and all these videos spread of Chinese people having dogs in cages that they're cooking or eating live mice and it's like yeah Look, I'm going to say that's bad and weird and wrong and it's okay for me to judge that and judge my culture as superior to theirs on the basis of that. | ||
Doesn't mean I hate them, right? | ||
Doesn't mean I want to kill them. | ||
Doesn't mean I want to stop them from doing what they're doing. | ||
But I can still judge them and there's nothing wrong with that. | ||
And I do think that, you know, races have, cultures have genetic memories, have different ways that they do things. | ||
You know, when you're talking about Native Americans, there's a There's a Native American soul, you know, that comes through. | ||
And when you talk about modern problems, I mean, still to this day, Native Americans are not doing well. | ||
You know, tribes and, you know, reserves are just hives of crime. | ||
And, you know, these big families get the casinos and then block everybody else out. | ||
And so obviously the solution is Haitians. | ||
We need to be Flooding the reserves with Haitians. | ||
We know the Native Americans are still struggling. | ||
They're not doing well per capita. | ||
You know, the results aren't good. | ||
And obviously the solution to that is to replace them all with Haitians and Dominicans immediately. | ||
Because I'm a liberal and I want to help this struggling community. | ||
So clearly, government-funded and supported migrants by the millions is the only solution. | ||
I'm a good liberal. | ||
unidentified
|
The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch live right now at band.video. | ||
Final extended segment on American Journal for today's broadcast. | ||
I've got two stories that I'm going to push to tomorrow so I can cover them in the way that they deserve. | ||
One of the stories is about... | ||
It's about the teenagers that deliberately ran down, ran over, hit with their car, and killed a retired police captain in Las Vegas. | ||
And they have been found incompetent to stand trial. | ||
So, I've been compiling, just over the last several months, the number of horrific, brutal, usually minority-on-white murders that are being... | ||
The murderers are being declared incompetent to stand trial and let off, basically. | ||
And I've been compiling some of those, but I want to do a little bit more. | ||
I want to flesh it out a little bit, and I'll talk about that tomorrow. | ||
The other story is the rumors about Tim Waltz, vice presidential candidate, being accused of impropriety with young men. | ||
Let's just say that. | ||
And again, I... I saw the claims. | ||
I've been following it. | ||
I want to be sure of what we say before we say it. | ||
There's some interesting rumors abound. | ||
We'll look into their validity as if he wasn't bad enough already. | ||
As if Tampon Tim wasn't enough of a liability. | ||
These horrific things come out later. | ||
I mean, his family hates him. | ||
He goes to China like 30 different times, including on his honeymoon with a bunch of kids. | ||
He might have actually stolen a nuclear national security manual when he was in college. | ||
There's a lot of stuff in this dude's past. | ||
Also, if you look at him, something weird there. | ||
Something weird going on with his whole, you know, being. | ||
So we'll cover all of that tomorrow. | ||
I should have, if I thought about it before, I would have invited Native Patriot on the show today. | ||
I knew he'd have some great takes on Columbus. | ||
I just love this dude. | ||
If you don't follow Native Patriot, he's a friend of the show and has been on multiple times at LaNativePatriot on X. I don't even know him that well, but there's something about his posting. | ||
I feel like we're friends. | ||
Yeah. I feel like I know him really well because of how he posts. | ||
But he posts the classic image of some Native chick saying, F Christopher Columbus, happy Indigenous Day of Resistance. | ||
And Native Patriot posts a picture of him decked out in the American flag with an AR-15, his eyes glowing red, and an Indian headdress with Make America Great Again on it, saying, be careful what you wish for. | ||
Just... I love it. | ||
I absolutely love it. | ||
And people are coming at him saying, Columbus was a slaver. | ||
He says, are most humans of notoriety throughout history owned slaves of some kind? | ||
Are we any better? Typing on a slave-made phone? | ||
Eating slave-made candy? | ||
Driving in a car with slave-made parts? | ||
You and I don't directly own slaves, but we pay their masters for our stuff. | ||
Which is all very true. | ||
And somebody else says, Tyler Ott at Ott underscore boy has a A good response to this. | ||
He says, Aren't they always telling us we have to have uncomfortable conversations about race? | ||
Only in one direction, though. | ||
With that, back to your phone calls. | ||
Jeff in Florida has called in about border encounters. | ||
Go ahead, Jeff. The colonization has shifted form, but it is just as real as it ever was. | ||
unidentified
|
In August... | |
This year, he could probably much say the percentage is equal along the whole four years. | ||
62% single men crossed the border, 7% families, and 11% unaccompanied minors. | ||
But I also wanted to go into your past callers about, I have a rabbit hole. | ||
What if Jesus' thousand years already reigned, you know, with those ancient buildings, and then in 1666, Sabbateans were created, and that was when Satan was released from hell, or released from his dungeon or whatever, | ||
because it says in the Bible that there'd be a thousand-year rain and You know, the thing about ancient history is the Bible and Herodotus basically got everything right. | ||
If you really want to know about ancient history, it's all in the Bible and the ancient historians. | ||
And they keep proving that. | ||
They'll read Herodotus, and it's some story that for a long time they thought was just some... | ||
These guys, 2,000 years ago, 3,000 years ago, these were just some goat herders. | ||
They didn't know what the hell they were talking about. | ||
But then an actual archaeologist will go, well, he says this city's here, let's go look for it, and sure enough, the city's there. | ||
And everything he said is exactly what they find evidence for in the archaeological record. | ||
So... We know what happened in history. | ||
It's in the Bible, and it's in Herodotus, and it's in Pliny, and it's in the Venerable Bede. | ||
The Venerable Bede. | ||
It's in the Oralinda book. | ||
It's another compilation of ancient history that is extremely solid. | ||
And this stuff is hidden from us, and the reality of it is hidden from us. | ||
It's not Sataria, though. It's just not... | ||
I had to break to you, but that's my take on it. | ||
But very good point. Thank you for that call, Jeff. | ||
Let's go to Tim in Wisconsin. | ||
Go ahead, Tim. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi, Harrison. I just... | |
I'm amazed at you. | ||
I think you're the sharpest tack on radio. | ||
I really do. | ||
And it's from the heart. | ||
You're awesome. | ||
Anyway, I want to call up about what Dr. | ||
Stella was on filling in or doing the final hour on Alex Jones' show, and I think it was last week, and she remarked on a biblical story where... | ||
And I can't tell you exactly where it is, but the king that was warring against Israel, ancient Israel, that is, that king basically couldn't do anything. | ||
And then he sacrificed his own son. | ||
And then after he sacrificed his son, a great wrath came on Israel at that time. | ||
And I wanted to kind of relate it to, you know, that's in the Bible, and Dr. | ||
Stella talked about it, you know, Dr. | ||
Stella Emanuel, who I greatly admire. | ||
Oh, yeah. She talked about it, and I'm relating it to the Democrats running their whole campaign, at least here in Wisconsin, it seems, that they're running their whole campaign on abortion. | ||
All of it. And the campaign, you know, is constantly, constantly, you know, this thing. | ||
And it's just so disheartening to think that they're actually going to win on that. | ||
But that leads me to think that maybe there's real power in this. | ||
You know, Dr. | ||
Stella talked about at the DNC how they set up the clinics there, and they were aborting babies, I guess, right there at the DNC. And I guess there's real power in this abortion for the dark forces. | ||
They're getting real power by basically sacrificing the children in this way. | ||
Anyway, that's pretty... | ||
There's something very real about that, and it's one of those things where it's like, Whether it's interpreted as spiritual consequences from God or just the natural consequences, they seem to align quite a bit in a very interesting way, right? | ||
If you look at the rates of diseases in the gay community and the fact that gay men on average die a lot earlier than straight men. | ||
I mean, you can explain that through the You know, access to, or, you know, whatever, the vulnerabilities because of the immune system that's compromised by the blah, blah, blah, or you can say, yeah, God is hitting you with a plague. | ||
It's like the outcome's the same one way or the other. | ||
And that's an interesting parallel to draw where evil people, in the old days at least, firmly believed that they gained power and were blessed by their gods for sacrificing children. | ||
And that seems to be the ticket to power, according to the Democrats. | ||
The craziest thing about it, honestly, is the fact that Trump's not even anti-abortion. | ||
To me, that's the wildest part. | ||
It is crazy that the only thing they have to offer, the only argument the Democrats can make for why you should vote for them is abortion. | ||
That's it. That's all they got. That is crazy. | ||
But it's also crazy that Trump doesn't care. | ||
The Democrats have nothing to run on. | ||
They have nothing. They have nothing to run on. | ||
So what they're choosing to run on... | ||
Without exception, it has nothing to do with the Trump campaign. | ||
They're running on Project 2025, which he doesn't endorse, didn't write, and isn't his, and abortion. | ||
They're campaigning against a national abortion ban, which Trump has specifically said he's never going to do. | ||
He's not going to do it. He doesn't care about abortion. | ||
It's not a big topic for him. | ||
So it's like that to me is almost the craziest part of all of it, is that the abortion thing isn't even a real issue. | ||
unidentified
|
Because nobody actually is pushing for that. | |
So yeah, it's sick. | ||
It is sick and gross and weird. | ||
But I've explained it, and I get it. | ||
They have a right. They believe they have a right, and they believe you're trying to take away that right. | ||
And it's portrayed as... | ||
You know, some fusty old man trying to control what women are doing with their body, and that's a very compelling message. | ||
And yet, to combat that message, you have Donald Trump going, I don't care, leave it to the states, and that's not enough for them. | ||
So I don't know what the answer is, but it is sick. | ||
Thanks for the call, Tim. Let's go to Dan in Canada. | ||
He's talking about George Soros buying up radio stations. | ||
And I believe the approval of that was fast-tracked through the FCC. Go ahead, Dan, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, welcome back, and congratulations on your baby. | |
Thank you. Yeah, basically what I want to do is, I was watching OAN with John Hines. | ||
It's a four-minute, 18-second clip on October the 8th. | ||
It says, Attorney George Braun, B-R-A-U-N, It explains FCC improper point approval of SARS buying radio stations. | ||
I think that if Alex can look at that or you can look at that, it's a way, because it's illegal, he says, and it takes two years just for one. | ||
So that could be a little light towards keeping Infowars alive. | ||
Oh, interesting. I hadn't thought about that. | ||
I mean, he's taking over these popular radio stations that I believe are all owned by iHeart, or at least a massive chunk of them. | ||
There already is a singular conglomerate that more or less has a monopoly over radio stations, but George Soros made a bid for it. | ||
And of course, the same company that, or the same government organization that is like trying to shut down Elon Musk's SpaceX because they're mad that he is letting free speech exist on Twitter. | ||
Fast tracked that through 200 plus radio stations being purchased up by a far left activist who's dedicated tens of billions of dollars to destroying this country from within. | ||
It's fairly obvious what they're doing. | ||
It's an act of desperation in my interpretation. | ||
And there's a distinct hypocrisy. | ||
unidentified
|
you How do I put this? | |
When it comes to Elon Musk, and boy, do leftists just hate Elon Musk. | ||
And they're constantly posting things where it's Elon Musk like wearing a MAGA hat. | ||
And leftists will post something that says, oh, right-wingers were so mad when they thought they were being censored, but now Elon Musk, he's so much worse than any of the others. | ||
He's openly partisan. | ||
And let me explain the difference here. | ||
The George Soros's, the Mark Zuckerberg's, the Bill Gates, they are far-left destroyers of civilization. | ||
They are tyrants, of a classic mold. | ||
But they pretend to be nonpartisan. | ||
So the difference between Elon Musk and a Mark Zuckerberg or a Jack Dorsey or anything else is the big tech masters of old would pretend and try very hard to convince you that they're just, they're not partisan and they're just trying to run a business and they just want people, they just love how people communicate on their platforms while simultaneously and ruthlessly and secretly crushing the reach of right wingers, censoring right wingers, kicking right wingers off the platform, spying | ||
on right wingers and providing their information to the government, censoring people on the basis of the government, just rabidly without reservation using their power and their platform and their organization to crush the speech of their enemies while pretending, while putting on a pink sweater and just talking about, oh, humans are so great and we just want everybody to be free. | ||
Meanwhile, Elon Musk doesn't censor these people, is not using his position as owner of Twitter to... | ||
You know, only make it where his side has a voice and where he's silencing everybody who disagrees with him. | ||
He's not doing any censorship and he's open about his partisan stance. | ||
He's open about his right-wing budding beliefs. | ||
So is that hypocrisy? | ||
I don't know. Is that hypocrisy? | ||
Is it... It's just sort of a good example of how the two sides work. | ||
Right-wingers will sit there and go, yeah, I'm right-wing. | ||
At Infowars, we'll sit here and we'll tell you, yeah, we have a bias. | ||
We have a bias for truth. We have a bias for humanity. | ||
We are telling you what we believe to be true, and we believe Donald Trump is the best option for us, and he's different than the old Republicans who were blue-blood snakes. | ||
We're very open about what we believe and why we say the things that we're saying. | ||
At the same time, we're going to tell you the truth no matter what. | ||
And if something is against our beliefs, we're gonna tell it to you and try to explain it. | ||
We're not gonna hide it. We're not gonna lie about it. | ||
We're not gonna disguise it. | ||
We're on the flip side. | ||
You have people who claim just to be above all of that. | ||
We would never. And CNN, we are just totally dedicated to pure journalistic integrity while meanwhile they are lying out of their every orifice where they are just spewing an endless cascade of lies. | ||
And this is the difference. This is the difference between right-wingers and left-wingers. | ||
Right-wingers will not oppress you and be honest about their position. | ||
Left-wingers will lie about their position and then ruthlessly destroy you if they have even a modicum of power. | ||
And for that reason, they should have all of their power removed forever. | ||
We have a few more callers. | ||
Now let's go to William in Arkansas. | ||
I want to talk about gun control. | ||
Go ahead, William. You're on the air. | ||
Well, you know, they talk about gun control and wanting to get rid of the semi-automatics, calling them assault rifles, and they're so ignorant that they don't realize that Normandy and all your major campaigns, all World War I, are done with a bolt action. | ||
So we're dealing with just ignorant people. | ||
You know, so what else can you say? | ||
The people that think they're going to fight against people coming to your door and taking your weapons, it's a joke. | ||
I mean, who opens their door with a.45 ready to fight two armed professionals with backup when your wife's cooking dinner and your brand new baby's, you know, sitting there with grandma? | ||
Are you going to get in a firefight with two pros that come knock on your door and say, we're here for your guns? | ||
Good luck. You know, there's a state of reality that most people are not living in, and I don't know what to do about it. | ||
unidentified
|
Once again... Yeah, but I sort of disagree, William. | |
I think... I think Americans would go out in a blaze of glory. | ||
I don't think they would have success in that. | ||
And I think the instant that they started to do that... | ||
I don't think that's happening anytime soon. | ||
I mean, obviously, we'd all do well to remember, you know, Solzhenitsyn. | ||
We should have loved freedom more. | ||
We didn't love freedom enough. | ||
You know, refusing to stand up, refusing to get involved, refusing to interrupt your comfortable life, you know, in order to stop this. | ||
But I don't think that gun control is even a topic worth discussing anymore. | ||
And it's because of their actions. | ||
It's because when COVID came around, they wanted to put us all in camps for not taking their shot. | ||
And when they talk and when they really tell you what they truly believe, it's like nobody's under any illusions now. | ||
They want you dead. | ||
They hate you. | ||
The only reason they would ever want to take our guns is for the express purpose of then doing things that our guns prevent. | ||
Of abusing us in a way that they can't right now because of our guns. | ||
I think everybody gets that now. | ||
I think even people that maybe 10 years ago, if they'd said, it's a voluntary gun buyback and we're all doing it, they'd say, hey, look, you know, I love my gun. | ||
I like hunting. But, you know, if we're all doing it, it'd be like Australia, right? | ||
All right, we're doing the gun buyback. | ||
Like that might have been a possibility 10, 20 years ago. | ||
At this point, No, no, no. | ||
That's not happening. I don't think that's happening anytime soon. | ||
I don't think a voluntary buyback is ever going to happen because we all understand you people are psychos and you want to kill us and our guns are stopping you. | ||
So we're never going to voluntarily give them up. | ||
And if you try to take them, you're going to have problems. | ||
You're going to have big problems. You're going to have problems way worse than the problems Israel is having in Gaza or Lebanon. | ||
And I think what you'd see pretty rapidly is an American Hezbollah. | ||
If you look into how Hezbollah got started and how it was founded and how it was created, it is a militia movement. | ||
That's what it is. And so that's what you'd see. | ||
And in case you haven't been keeping up with it, this is another story I'll have to get back to tomorrow because we haven't had time to fully break it down. | ||
But just yesterday or the day before, Hezbollah launched the biggest attack it's ever launched and injured 60-plus Israeli troops. | ||
And this is after the pager explosion. | ||
This is after the bunker buster bombs killing their leader. | ||
This is after... Over a month of continual bombing campaigns, and yet Hezbollah is launching the biggest attacks that they've ever launched. | ||
And that is what happens when you have a sophisticated and, dare I say, well-regulated militia running around your country defending it from outsiders. | ||
So, a lot of people point to Vietnam, but there's plenty of modern world examples of how Impossible it is for a modern American army or a modern military to take on a population that is even moderately armed, even like armed with the scraps from their terrorist neighbors with missiles that are 20 years old and guns they made out of disused water pipes. | ||
The human spirit can overcome a lot of technological barriers. | ||
And I think, again, one thing that the American government is Very careful not to do is cross over that red line. | ||
That means the American people would actually use their weapons. | ||
Thank you very much for the call, William. | ||
That's about going to do it for us as we come to the end of the show today. | ||
I'm very happy to be back again. | ||
Big thank you to the crew and for just everybody at InfoWars and for all of our supporters. | ||
Just, you cannot understand how... | ||
Amazing it is, having this headquarters, knowing that there's this beating heart of the resistance still chugging along despite all of the attacks. | ||
And I just hope that you go to InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
I hope you go to TheAlexJonesStore.com when we get that exactly right. | ||
TheAlexJonesStore.com is a fantastic way to support us. | ||
Now and into the future. | ||
And of course, every purchase you make, you are automatically entered to win a very powerful 2024 Dodge Ram HD as a truck worth over $100,000. | ||
And all you have to do is buy the thing you are going to buy anyway at thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
So please do go there and support us and keep us on the air for the time being at the very least. | ||
And tomorrow, we are going to cover the incompetent to stand trial. | ||
I'm going to bring you any updates on what's been going on in Israel and whatever else happens between now and then... | ||
Oh, I remember what I was going to say. | ||
Tonight, Owen Schroer debates destiny. | ||
I'm so glad I remembered this at the final minute of our show because I'm so excited to watch Owen Schroer. | ||
If there's anybody that can... | ||
Destroy utterly the... | ||
Festering manifestation of mental illness that is destiny. | ||
It's Owen Schroer. | ||
Destiny relies on getting people triggered. | ||
He relies on people believing outlandish things. | ||
He debates people that maybe don't know what they're talking about or get led down paths that they're not trying to discuss that makes them frustrated. | ||
I think Owen Schroer is going to destroy him. | ||
So make sure to tune in for that and cheer on our boy Owen Schroer as he takes on destiny tonight. |