Speaker | Time | Text |
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Ladies and gentlemen, we've looked at all the angles, and on my regular weekday show, 11 a.m. | ||
to 3 p.m. | ||
Central, the real Alex Jones on X, and on X as well, the Alex Jones Network. | ||
We've been laying out the fact that Trump is going to win in a landslide, but it doesn't mean it'll look like a landslide because there's so much fraud baked in. | ||
But they've only got so much fraud, so many dead people, so many illegals, so many just phantom folks like in Michigan that Well, that's already the law, | ||
but they have another law saying that. | ||
The Fed said, hey, they stay on. | ||
It goes on and on. | ||
And then you saw Texas a month ago. | ||
The Secretary of State said we're being threatened by the feds. | ||
So non-citizens, people with non-citizen IDs can vote. | ||
You can check all this. | ||
It's all on record. | ||
There's a bunch of other examples. | ||
Now in Washington state, ballot boxes are getting burnt. | ||
Democrats are getting caught breaking into them in other areas. | ||
And in Nevada, just a few hours ago, their Supreme Court said for three days after the election, Ballots with no postmark or date on them will be counted so they can just find out how many they need when Trump wins next Tuesday and just keep stuffing and keep delivering them just magically there and then they've got what they need. | ||
It's the same story. | ||
So instead of trucks arriving at 3 a.m. | ||
in Detroit, And being brought in all for Joe Biden, now they're just, whatever they need is just put into the mailboxes with no dates on it, total fraud. | ||
So the system is totally desperate. | ||
I don't think it'll be enough to steal it from Trump, but this is just insane. | ||
But regardless, the journey is the destination. | ||
Big Pharma, the New World Order, the child trafficking, the global is trying to start World War III. It's all out in the open. | ||
It's the hottest issue everywhere. | ||
All the top talk show hosts are anti-New World Order now. | ||
The revolution is happening right now. | ||
So pray for Trump, pray for America. | ||
We're not going to be violent if they steal it. | ||
We're just going to expose it. | ||
They're going to try to string the election out for weeks so they can try to create some type of fight on the ground. | ||
Democrats are saying they're not going to certify Trump if he does win. | ||
Congressman Jamie Raskin and others. | ||
We're going to take it to Congress, so it's going to be up to us on January 6, 2025, to tell the rampaging Trump mobs that he's disqualified. | ||
And then we need bodyguards for everybody in civil war conditions, all because the nine justices, not all of them, but these justices who have not many cases to look at every year, not that much work to do, a huge staff, great protection, simply do not want to do their job. | ||
And they're talking about civil war conditions and Carvel's calling for armed uprisings while they claim we're going to do that. | ||
So we're not going to get violent. | ||
We're just going to keep exposing them. | ||
And four years ago, they were denying this even after the election. | ||
Now it's all out in the open. | ||
They're having to say illegals can vote and all the rest of this crap in front of everybody. | ||
And now ballots in Nevada For three days after, with no postmark or good, so they can deliver any amount of fraud they need. | ||
So we are forcing the monster out in the open. | ||
We're forcing him to take the mask off. | ||
We're winning the war. | ||
If the globalists steal this battle, and I'm not getting you ready for that, I think Trump's going to win. | ||
So decisively, too big to rig. | ||
But even if they do this, we are winning the war. | ||
It'll be a Pyrrhic victory. | ||
They'll win this battle, but it'll even further discredit them more. | ||
But I grew up with Tucker Carlson last night. | ||
In Madison Square Garden, when he said, look, she's so unpopular, there's no way anybody's going to buy this. | ||
So we are at an incredible juncture right now. | ||
Everybody needs to be completely focused. | ||
You need to educate everybody around you because people are ready to wake up. | ||
Everything I've talked about for 30 years has been confirmed. | ||
It's all out in the open. | ||
And Infowars could be shut down in 14 days. | ||
It's emblematic of the climate of danger and tyranny and how much the truth threatens the establishment. | ||
And it's not just me doing important shows. | ||
It's not just other folks like Eric Carlson. | ||
It's you. | ||
Who decides to share these reports and get the information and share it with others because the mind is very fertile to the truth. | ||
The great awakening is happening now. | ||
And I need you to follow us on the new Alex Jones Network in case they shut down InfoWars at AJNLive for Alex Jones Network, AJNLive on X. And I need you to support our sponsors that are separate from InfoWars. | ||
TheAlexJonesStore.com with incredible supplements, t-shirts, ball caps, hoodies, incredible supplements that are the very, very best that are game-changing, and you're funding the second American Revolution. | ||
So now it's critical, plus they're great products. | ||
unidentified
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I want to thank you all for your word of mouth, your prayer, and your financial support. | |
Take action now. | ||
History's happening now. | ||
We've proven we're the tip of the spear. | ||
We're the most effective at waking people up with the truth, and I really humbly ask you for your support. | ||
And if you don't stand up for people... | ||
unidentified
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It's Tuesday, October 29th in the year of our Lord, 2024. | |
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
I think it's time to blow this thing, get everybody in the stuff together. | ||
Okay, three, two, one, let's jam. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, coming to you live from Austin, Texas, here at the InfoWars. | ||
Head for one week. | ||
We are one week away from Election Day. | ||
Next Tuesday, the fate of America. | ||
And the fate of the world will be decided one way or another. | ||
Very exciting stuff, and we have a lot of election news to talk about. | ||
We'll be taking your calls, of course, and we'll be talking to Noel Fritsch about a very interesting... | ||
Tactic perhaps being pursued by some of the states devastated by the hurricane. | ||
What are they going to do if, you know, every polling place got washed out? | ||
Well, there's a very interesting tactic being looked at, and we'll tell you all about that. | ||
A lot to cover, a lot of videos to get to. | ||
Now let's just get into it. | ||
Here it is, your Daily Dispatch. | ||
All right, here it is, folks. | ||
Your daily dispatch for Tuesday, the 29th of October, 2024. | ||
Police believe three fires at Washington, Oregon ballot boxes are linked. | ||
Police believe three suspected arsons at ballot drop boxes in northwestern U.S. states of Washington and Oregon are linked and have identified what they believe is a suspect vehicle in Oregon, officials said on Monday. | ||
Two separate blazes erupted in Portland, Oregon. | ||
Oregon on Monday damaging three ballots and Vancouver, Washington destroying hundreds, officials said. | ||
They said the two blazers resembled a third fire at a Vancouver ballot box on October 8th that did not succeed in damaging any ballots. | ||
I believe we actually have a video of that. | ||
Clip number 12 here, Clark County Elections. | ||
Ballot drop box at the Fishers Landing Transit Center was lit on fire this morning. | ||
That's the title of the post. | ||
Here's a crazy idea. | ||
Hear me out. | ||
What if we don't leave our sacred votes in unguarded boxes on the street corner? | ||
I know. | ||
I know it's crazy because, you know, we've had mail-in boxes for like two or three years now. | ||
So it's like, you know, far be it for me to suggest such a drastic change in a long-held tradition. | ||
But what if we don't leave the sacred votes of our citizens by the hundreds and In open boxes on the street corner. | ||
I know. | ||
It's a crazy idea, but I'm just throwing it out there. | ||
What if we didn't do this? | ||
What if this wasn't a thing? | ||
What would happen then? | ||
It would be safer and actually count? | ||
I mean, what are they going to do? | ||
Everybody's ballot got burned? | ||
Oh well. | ||
Sorry. | ||
That's just what happens. | ||
Are they going to try to contact people? | ||
Everybody in the area with the ballot saying your ballot might have been destroyed? | ||
I mean, what do you do? | ||
What do you do? | ||
Hundreds of ballots up in flames. | ||
You can't look at them. | ||
You can't read the ballots. | ||
You can't look at them and go, oh, this one was from Stacey. | ||
We'll go tell her. | ||
No, it's all ash now. | ||
So, uh... | ||
It's a bad system, so it's a bad system and it should be completely revamped. | ||
Speaking of being a terrible system on purpose, rife for fraud on purpose, top Nevada court says unpostmarked ballots received after U.S. Election Day can be counted. | ||
What? | ||
I'm sorry? | ||
Unpostmarked ballots can be accepted after Election Day. | ||
The Nevada Supreme Court on Monday ruled that mail-in ballots received after Election Day without a postmark may be counted a loss for Republicans in a battleground state that could determine the next president and control of the U.S. Congress. | ||
The seven justices affirmed a lower court ruling against Donald Trump's presidential campaign in the RNC, which sued to block a Nevada Secretary of State's policy proposal that ballots received by the third day after the election without a postmark be counted. | ||
I don't understand. | ||
How does it get there if it doesn't have a postmark? | ||
I genuinely don't understand. | ||
The idea is that if you get your vote into the post office on time, it gets postmarked. | ||
So it's not your fault if it shows up a few days later. | ||
But in this case, they don't have to have... | ||
How are you getting the ballot? | ||
Nevada Supreme Court decides Democrats get to print as many ballots as they want for a few days after the election and just count them right there where they print them. | ||
I guess that's the thing that's happening. | ||
If a voter properly and timely casts their vote by mailing their ballot before or on the day of the election and through a post office omission, the ballot is not postmarked, it would go against public policy to discount that properly cast vote, the court's majority said. | ||
Okay, so they're saying you can accept ballots that don't have postmarks on the off chance that the post office forgets to postmark your piece of mail. | ||
Okay. | ||
Is that a thing that happens? | ||
No. | ||
No, it's not. | ||
I mean, literally, there's just no other reason to do this if you're not cheating. | ||
Like, there's no other reason. | ||
There's no other reason. | ||
I mean, that's just insane. | ||
Yeah, you know, in case the post office forgets to run the mail through the machine that every piece of mail is run through, and they forget to add a postmark, all right, no, okay, yeah, fine. | ||
Maybe they should all be lit on fire. | ||
Maybe that was a good thing in some weird, twisted way. | ||
Yeah, we'll try to continue to contend with the just sheer ridiculous insanity that is the electoral process so-called right now, including I have some exclusive and very interesting news, sort of a follow-up. | ||
To our coverage of potential fraud last Friday. | ||
I'll get to that in just a little bit. | ||
Meanwhile, Kamala Harris, and this is one of maybe the weirdest story of the election cycle so far. | ||
Kamala Harris's VP choice Tim Walls had secret fling with daughter of top Chinese communist official during teaching stint in China. | ||
This is a strange story. | ||
Tim Walls apparently had a romance with Jenna Wang, daughter of a CCP official, in 1989. | ||
She said her father, Bin Hui, would disown her for fraternizing with a Westerner. | ||
Racist. | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
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We all thought that he was into Wang. | |
Yes. | ||
unidentified
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Just not that Wang. | |
Very good point. | ||
Very good, albeit juvenile point. | ||
Yes, that's very true. | ||
Here's the thing. | ||
Nobody really knows what to make of this because people are suggesting this story was planted by the Democratic Party because they want to make Tim Wallace seem... | ||
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Not gay? | |
Not gay. | ||
Well, I was going to put it more tactfully than that. | ||
But yeah, not gay. | ||
Not gay and not like off-putting. | ||
It's very... | ||
You know what I should have done is grab the video. | ||
There are videos, people where, you know, you'll have two girls, they're like out on night on the town, it's a guy walking around interviewing people, and he'll go, you know, would you date me? | ||
And one girl's like, no, no. | ||
And the other girl's like, yeah, I would. | ||
And the first girl goes, yeah, maybe I would too, actually. | ||
And it's hilarious. | ||
It's like, okay, you're literally just going up. | ||
So there's, there's a, I'm just giving you a deep, Deep secrets of the female psychology. | ||
Whether they're attracted to a man is determined almost entirely by whether other women are attracted to that man. | ||
So if Tim Walls is a man that this Chinese girl, who is probably very skinny and pretty, if she's willing to be disowned by her own family, if she is willing to risk being ousted from her billionaire heiress position and disowned if she is willing to risk being ousted from her billionaire heiress position and disowned by her own family, I mean, Tim Walls is He's probably not totally off-putting. | ||
That creepy feeling that you get up your spine anytime you see him try to act like a real human being, that's wrong. | ||
You shouldn't think like that. | ||
He's actually very attractive. | ||
Trust us. | ||
This Chinese woman in the 80s was super into it. | ||
Okay, so that's one suggestion, is that this was planted by the Harris campaign to make Tim Walz look not repulsive to women. | ||
Okay? | ||
Interesting, because what this really is, because here's the other little secret of this, he is repulsive to women. | ||
And there's no real reason why a Chinese billionaire heiress would be interested in him in the first place, let alone risk being disowned by her family for dating a Westerner. | ||
What happened here is that he was honey-potted by a communist agent. | ||
So if this was a plant by the Kamala Harris campaign... | ||
It's not doing you any favors, actually. | ||
Actually, when people look at that and go, wait, that pretty Chinese girl was into Tim Walls? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
What's the ulterior motive for that? | ||
Oh, right, she was the daughter of a high-ranking Chinese communist, and she was being used to honeypot the gullible American idiot, useless moron. | ||
Useful idiot, I should say. | ||
He had a clandestine romance with the daughter of a high-ranking Chinese communist official. | ||
It reads like the plot of 90% of the books on Audible. | ||
unidentified
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After seeing how ugly his kids are, don't you think she's super relieved? | |
You know? | ||
No comment. | ||
No comment on the children. | ||
I'm above such things. | ||
unidentified
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I'm not. | |
I think we may be missing a story from the Daily News. | ||
unidentified
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Perhaps. | |
I think we only have four. | ||
One of them got printed twice. | ||
We'll figure out what that is. | ||
But this is a very huge story that is very illuminating about the media landscape as well as the Got it. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
Yes, I have it. | ||
So yeah, this story gives a lot of insight into not just the media landscape, the corporate control, but also the real cultish nature of the Democrats. | ||
Washington Post flooded by cancellations after Bezos' non-endorsement decision. | ||
Over 200,000 subscribers flee Washington Post after Bezos blocks Harris' endorsement. | ||
Owner Jeff Bezos blocked the Washington Post from endorsing a presidential candidate less than two weeks before Election Day. | ||
The editorial board had drafted an endorsement for Kamala Harris. | ||
Because of course they did. | ||
Because of course they did. | ||
200,000 people canceling this digital description. | ||
Choosing to let democracy die in darkness, I guess. | ||
They chose darkness. | ||
Yeah, this isn't good. | ||
This isn't good. | ||
It's so funny because recently this has been Even more of a talking point on the left is the danger that Donald Trump poses to the media because he talks about revoking licenses of CBS when they blatantly and unapologetically totally change an answer during a primetime presidential interview with Kamala Harris and then doing it again with Mike Johnson. | ||
A perfectly valid criticism, I might add, on Trump's behalf. | ||
But Washington Post might end as an institution because of the Democrats' hysterical partisanship. | ||
It really is appropriate, I think. | ||
I think they get exactly what they deserve. | ||
I don't think... | ||
You know, in a way, I don't know. | ||
Maybe this is an issue that we need to get over. | ||
Is this weakness? | ||
I kind of feel bad for them. | ||
Like, I shouldn't, right? | ||
They're our enemies. | ||
We should be stealing their horses and hearing the lamentation of their women. | ||
Like, I shouldn't care that our enemies are being burned to the ground. | ||
But I also love America, and I actually have some sort of deep-seated reverence for long-held institutions in this country. | ||
Things like the Ivy League schools or these newspapers. | ||
I just want them to not be captured by satanic psychopaths. | ||
I still kind of want them to exist. | ||
I just want them to do the thing they're supposed to do. | ||
I actually genuinely do think it's important that you have a powerful and important and influential and prestigious media landscape. | ||
On the understanding that it's there to hold the power to account. | ||
unidentified
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But... | |
So, I don't know. | ||
I mean, this literally could take down Washington Post. | ||
I mean, they were not doing well already. | ||
I was already sort of laughing at them when a couple weeks ago... | ||
I mean, the deals they're running are pretty incredible. | ||
You could tell they were in trouble long before this particular scandal. | ||
When they're like, we'll give you three months for a dollar. | ||
Can we have a dollar? | ||
He's like, I just want a dollar. | ||
It's like, wow, that's very cheap, three months for a dollar or whatever they're offering. | ||
So you could tell they were really struggling to get subscribers there already. | ||
Now 200,000 of their most cultish readers have removed their subscription, not because Washington Post endorsed Donald Trump, but because they didn't endorse Kamala Harris. | ||
And now there's a lot of discussion as to why Jeff Bezos would do this. | ||
What's his motivation? | ||
What's behind the seeming transformation of the likes of Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg? | ||
I know one of the areas of speculation is that Jeff Bezos and his company Amazon spent literally billions of dollars because he wanted to have a television show version of Lord of the Rings. | ||
And then it was so infested and contaminated with leftist ideology that he has now shifted his entire worldview. | ||
That the rings of power was such a bankrupting disappointment and moral crime that Jeff Bezos is second-guessing his entire worldview and foundational beliefs. | ||
That's one aspect of speculation. | ||
That he gave Lord of the Rings to a bunch of libtards, and they created rings of power, and now he's voting Trump and probably a fascist. | ||
Yeah, we'll get back into that. | ||
The final story was this. | ||
Harris hopes Ellipse speech will recall Trump's chaos, but also evoke her own promise. | ||
Yes, we're a week away from the election. | ||
The candidates are making their final play, their last gasp, their closing arguments, if you will. | ||
We're going to look at those. | ||
We're going to talk about the actual topics. | ||
Because it's totally my fault, but we're one week away from the election. | ||
We're maybe three weeks away from Infowars not existing anymore. | ||
It wasn't until like last night lying in bed. | ||
I'm like, we should probably make a big deal out of that. | ||
We should probably have like some sort of thing, some sort of series of shows that either looks back over the entire candidacies and maybe goes through like every day. | ||
We could dedicate to one of the major topics of this, but it's info. | ||
But we're like constantly just having to deal with whatever new thing crops up. | ||
I didn't even think about this, but I think we're going to do this. | ||
I think probably starting tomorrow, we're going to dedicate our shows in the final week run-up to the election to the really big topics, to get a fully-fledged, 30,000-foot holistic view of the topics. | ||
Tomorrow we'll do the border and immigration. | ||
We'll just focus on that and try to highlight some of the biggest stories, talk about some of the numbers of what the actual topics are with the Intention of driving home and like illustrating the importance of the actual, like what's actually at stake at this election. | ||
Because in addition to focusing on the actual issues, crime and law and order, immigration, geopolitics and war, like the things that the president actually has an impact on and will determine the fate of the world moving forward, we need to focus on these and talk about these and talk about what's at stake depending on who gets elected. | ||
In a week. | ||
And then there's things like abortion, which it's like, it's just not actually a, it's not actually like a real, real thing, like a real topic. | ||
Like, it's not, it's nothing really all that different is going to happen one way or another. | ||
Like, it's done, it's over, uh, Supreme Court overturned Roe v. | ||
Wade. | ||
It's gone back to the states. | ||
Trump's not going to do a federal thing. | ||
He said he'd veto one if the Congress did. | ||
It's just kind of like a dead issue. | ||
It's not something that is motivating to Trump himself, certainly, in the big picture. | ||
I guess if Kamala gets in, then they'll want to do a federal ban, and it'll be contentious, and it'll be argumentative, and it'll just be... | ||
Another just unnecessary aspect of friction in the American populace. | ||
It'll be annoying. | ||
But it's not actually a thing. | ||
It's not nearly the equivalent to the millions upon millions of people pouring across our border, every one of which is getting thousands upon thousands of taxpayer dollars for free for breaking our laws. | ||
These are things that actually will affect the demographics of The country itself, and et cetera, et cetera. | ||
And then you look at the topics that Kamala Harris is pitching, and it's like abortion. | ||
I know, it is a big topic. | ||
It's very contentious. | ||
There's a lot of discussion about it. | ||
But politically, in reality, the effect that it has on the things that the president is actually in charge of, not really a big deal. | ||
Not really that big of a deal, actually. | ||
And these are the things... | ||
Transgenderism. | ||
Because we can just look over the last two presidential administrations. | ||
We're in kind of a unique position right now where both of the candidates have track records. | ||
Both track records within this decade. | ||
Normally, even if you have somebody, there'd be an eight-year rather than a four-year gap between their presidencies. | ||
But we have... | ||
You know, the timeline. | ||
And we can look at what happened over Trump's administration. | ||
Look at what happened over the Biden-Harris administration. | ||
And when it comes to things like abortion, Trump got the best Supreme Court justice ever. | ||
They overturned Roe vs. | ||
Way. | ||
And that's sort of it. | ||
That's where it sits. | ||
And then you have things like transgenderism. | ||
If you talk to leftist activists, if you listen to their interviews, they seem to think that Transgender children and transgender surgeries, it's all hinging on this election. | ||
It doesn't actually have anything to do with the election, really. | ||
Culturally, maybe an impetus one way or the other would benefit one way or the other. | ||
But everything that's happening with transgenderism is happening with medical boards and decisions being made by hospitals and universities. | ||
And the presidency can affect that. | ||
But again, it's not like... | ||
It's not like a do or die thing in terms of the fate of the entire country. | ||
So we'll talk about the final closing arguments of both campaigns. | ||
Harris making the point that abortion is the only thing that matters. | ||
Forget inflation and not being able to afford childcare and the Third World War that's breaking out right now. | ||
That's all to the side. | ||
You have to be able to kill your babies. | ||
Whereas Trump is making the arguments that actually matter and will be impacted by the choice of presidency. | ||
And when we get back, I'm going to show you. | ||
I got four videos. | ||
I got two pairs of videos to present to you. | ||
It's a very interesting contrast. | ||
We're going to do a little compare and contrasting with a couple of videos on the other side. | ||
So stay with us. | ||
It's the American Journal. | ||
Go to thealexjonesstore.com to support us. | ||
And you could win a truck. | ||
You could win a truck. | ||
You got like one more day. | ||
I don't know how this is going to end. | ||
If you want a truck, you better believe you've got one. . | ||
unidentified
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Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | |
We're one week away from election and the topic that should be on everybody's mind is, of course, election fraud or more More specifically, election insecurity. | ||
The potential for fraud. | ||
The totally unnecessary changes made to the electoral process that are destroying our ability to trust our elections. | ||
That include mail-in drop boxes. | ||
We've already seen it abused and fraudulent votes caught in Mesa County, Colorado. | ||
Last night, three ballot boxes were burned. | ||
Hundreds of ballots destroyed. | ||
Northwest states. | ||
Oregon and Washington. | ||
And I told you last week about one of the suspicious ways in which Democratic operatives in back rooms are being tasked with copying by hand, redoing, revoting every single military ballot. | ||
And this is happening in Harris County in this case, but probably all over the place. | ||
And I expect to... | ||
Hear about this officially very soon. | ||
Things are happening. | ||
This is what I just posted about a minute ago. | ||
I've received reports of election insecurity that are shocking in Harris County, Texas, Houston. | ||
The machines being used to tabulate ballots cannot accept ballots being sent in by overseas military voters. | ||
Every single military ballot is being opened and re-voted on a new ballot and the original is destroyed. | ||
This has been going on for weeks, but it appears as though state authorities are now aware of what's going on in the future. | ||
Expect to hear more about this soon, as well as some text reports describing this. | ||
Saying, I don't understand why they don't just manually count the ballots. | ||
As best I can tell, they're tearing them apart, taping them back together, copying them, and then one Democrat reads to another Democrat the individual vote, and they vote again on a machine-readable ballot. | ||
Okay, so do you understand what's happening? | ||
The military is being sent ballots on 8 to 11 paper, standard letter-sized paper. | ||
The tabulation machines apparently can't read these. | ||
Why they can't read these, we don't know. | ||
Why AI is being used, we don't know. | ||
Why they're being provided ballots that aren't able to be read by the machines that we use. | ||
Who knows? | ||
Who knows why we do any of this stuff? | ||
It's insane, but this is what's happening. | ||
So it comes on an 8x11 piece of paper. | ||
Apparently, you can't read it the way it's stapled. | ||
So literally, they'll take a military ballot, they rip it apart, Because the staples make it hard to read or something. | ||
And then they tape it back together. | ||
And then they photocopy that. | ||
And then they take the photocopy and one person reads out what choices are on that ballot. | ||
And another Democrat-appointed person sits there and fills out what is being said. | ||
And then I guess they paperclip those together and then that gets put through the machine. | ||
But every... | ||
Overseas deployed active service member is having their vote opened and re-voted, duplicated, transcribed by Democrat operatives in a backroom somewhere. | ||
One of which is reading out what they see and the other who's filling it out. | ||
Supposedly, honestly, we don't really know. | ||
We don't really know. | ||
Totally impossible To determine whether or not these votes are valid or not, because the personal information is scrubbed from the vote itself. | ||
It's not good. | ||
It's not good. | ||
But the authorities are aware of it at this point, and we may be hearing as soon as today from Texas state authorities. | ||
But hopefully we've done some part in bringing awareness to just one of the myriad of bizarre workarounds that are being employed just arbitrarily by some dude who's been designated a judge by the Democratic Party. | ||
And they're just like, yeah, we thought this was a great way to do it. | ||
It's not like secret. | ||
It's not like what they're doing is... | ||
It's just totally untrustworthy, totally insecure, and totally haphazard. | ||
So there's that. | ||
So there's that. | ||
That's happening, and we'll see what happens with that. | ||
Now, I have a lot of videos to show you, and we'll start with a pair of videos about this topic in particular and about Somebody who we probably haven't paid enough attention to in the election cycle up till now, and that is the man, Royce White, who is going up against the demon Amy Klobuchar. | ||
And they had a debate, and he absolutely destroyed her on the topic of electoral security, voter fraud, and the 2020 election in particular. | ||
So let's go to clip 11 here. | ||
This is Royce White debating Amy Klobuchar about the 2020 election theft. | ||
unidentified
|
Did Donald Trump lose Minnesota in 2020? | |
It would appear so. | ||
Yeah, it would appear so. | ||
But I can't be sure. | ||
And I don't think that that's dangerous to say. | ||
Again, I go back to the question, why is it okay that Amy and Kamala both Have been open in public and questioning the security. | ||
Look, your average voter machineand this is the gaffe that the mainstream media has covered upyour average voter machine has a chain of custody that doesn't even equal up to your average slot machine at a local casino. | ||
The reason is because the technology inside the voting machines are considered proprietary technology. | ||
And many people believe that you would need to see that technology or be able to auditforensic audit that technology to find out if there was widespread corruption. | ||
And I'm not saying that to undermine the integrity of elections in general. | ||
But this is something Americans should be concerned about, which I agree with Amy and Kamala from back in 2018. | ||
I don't know why the switch was so stark once they assumed control, and now all of a sudden the election is back on us to take back power, you could say. | ||
The switch of the narrative is disingenuous on face value. | ||
And I don't like it on either side. | ||
If the Republicans win and they say the elections are secure and we haven't solved those issues, I'll stand right up there in the United States Senate and say, don't play this game. | ||
If we haven't solved the election security issues, we need to solve them. | ||
Any sort of partisan bending of the narrative to try and silence Americans or quell their concerns is un-American, and it borders on being unconstitutional because it is freedom of speech. | ||
unidentified
|
Senator Klobuchar, did Donald Trump win 2020 Minnesota? | |
No, he did not. | ||
And I just want to quote my opponent's exact words. | ||
In an interview this September, he said, I think Trump won the election. | ||
I'm just going to go right out and say, I think he won the 2020 election. | ||
I think there was fraud. | ||
I think there's a lot of proof there was fraud. | ||
Rebuttal. | ||
unidentified
|
So, that is his exact words from just last month. | |
And I think it is so important in this times of divisiveness, whether you're a Democrat, Republican, or Independent, that we uphold the election results. | ||
If you're going to vote for Donald Trump... | ||
OK. If you're going to vote for Kamala Harris, OK. And one of my devotions as the chair of the rule committee has been to make sure that we have backup paper ballots. | ||
I have been advocating for this year's good news. | ||
Now, 97 percent of voting places in America, in states, whatever, have backup paper ballots. | ||
The only ones that don't are a few counties in Texas and a few counties in Louisiana. | ||
Royce White, 30 seconds. | ||
Well, I never said that I didn't think Donald Trump lost the 2020 election in general. | ||
I was asked if he lost Minnesota. | ||
And I'm not sure that the Minnesotans back in 2020 saw the benefit of a Donald Trump leadership. | ||
Certainly people that I know personally felt very differently about Donald Trump than they do now, and for good reason. | ||
And now I think a lot of people, especially black men, 18 to 44, which they're panicking about, see the America First policy approach as prudent. | ||
I'm not sure what we're saying here. | ||
Either the machines are secure or they're not. | ||
Why would we need backup paper ballots if the machines are completely secure? | ||
I think I love that ending point. | ||
It's a great point. | ||
She's like, the machines are perfectly secure. | ||
It's dangerous. | ||
Question the machines. | ||
And I think we should have backup paper ballots. | ||
It's like, well, all right. | ||
So it's got to be one or the other, right? | ||
Royce White went on to post this little compilation of It says, this is why I'm running for Senate. | ||
I just had it. | ||
Clip number three. | ||
Let's go to clip number three. | ||
Recently also, I actually held a demonstration for my colleagues here at the Capitol, where we brought in folks who, before our eyes, hacked election machines. | ||
unidentified
|
Those that are being used in many states, but are not state-of-the-art from our perspective. | |
We're very concerned because there's only three companies. | ||
You could easily hack into them. | ||
It makes it seem like all these states are doing different things, but in fact three companies are controlling them. | ||
43% of American voters use voting machines. | ||
That researchers have found have serious security flaws, including back doors. | ||
These companies are accountable to no one. | ||
They won't answer basic questions about their cybersecurity practices, and the biggest companies won't answer any questions at all. | ||
Five states have no paper trail, and that means there is no way to prove the numbers the voting machines put out are legitimate. | ||
So much for cybersecurity 101. | ||
Yeah, so much for cybersecurity, you guys. | ||
So that was a compilation of Democrats. | ||
Amy Klobuchar herself... | ||
Expressing the truth, you know, before they realized they needed to lie about the insecurity of election machines, the way that the software is proprietary, you can't look into it, you can't actually tell if it's secure or not. | ||
And here's the thing. | ||
Not only are... | ||
They're probably going to, in a very real way, challenge the results of the election if and when Donald Trump achieves victory. | ||
But they're setting up an overthrow of the entire governmental system, if that's the case. | ||
They've talked about it. | ||
Civil war conditions. | ||
Denying Trump intelligence reports. | ||
Not certifying his election. | ||
I mean, they are planning on doing this. | ||
And I saw a video that was going semi-viral today of a TikToker saying that Kamala Harris would not certify the election for Donald Trump. | ||
Thing is, they changed the rules. | ||
It used to be that you'd go there on January 6th to certify or not certify. | ||
Because they didn't want the possibility of not certifying, they made it ceremonial. | ||
Basically, you cannot object to the results of the election anymore. | ||
They've they changed that in another one of their knee jerk, ill advised, haphazardly implemented policy changes on the basis of. | ||
Some sort of moral hysteria that they've cooked up for themselves, right? | ||
They they imagine problems that don't exist. | ||
Then they implement real solutions to the imaginary problems and it makes actual problems for everybody. | ||
So Republicans just want a fair election. | ||
We just want an ability and a mechanism by which the results can be questioned, challenged, and investigated. | ||
We tried to do that on January 6. | ||
The Democrat fever delusion is that we're trying to overturn the election by using the constitutionally prescribed method of double-checking the election. | ||
And so to deal with the attempted overthrow, the insurrection of January 6th, 2021, they changed the rules to no longer allow the vice president to object and to not certify the election, solving a problem that didn't actually exist, creating their problem now that when Trump wins the election, they're not going to have any mechanism by which to challenge that. | ||
But also they're probably just going to cheat, so whether Trump has declared the winner or not is not necessarily reflective of reality in the first place. | ||
But of course all of this goes to the basic underlying fundamental dishonesty of the Democrats, which extends from and is perpetuated by and bolstered and upheld by The media arm of their establishment. | ||
Jeff Bezos, of course, tries to stem the bleeding from Washington Post, the, you know, Democracy Dies in Darkness paper, after their refusal to drink the Kool-Aid, their refusal to go down with the cult, their refusal to endorse Kamala Harris in an act of national suicide. | ||
It has caused the cult members, the truly faithful, the Kool-Aid drinkers, to leave them in droves. | ||
Because that's how these people are. | ||
And so Jeff Bezos, in an attempt to stop people from canceling subscriptions to Washington Post, of which apparently 200,000 people have. | ||
There's a lot of insight to be gleaned here into the mind of all these people, right? | ||
They don't really believe any of the stuff they claim. | ||
And I know we go over this over and over. | ||
You're probably sick of hearing it because it's so obvious. | ||
It's so overt. | ||
It's so constantly in your face. | ||
But it's important to remind you that, like, they don't actually care about these things. | ||
They don't actually care about free speech. | ||
They don't actually care about these institutions they claim to uphold. | ||
Right? | ||
How dare you? | ||
I mean, everything from January 6th. | ||
Our sacred democracy! | ||
And it's like, well, wasn't your site? | ||
Like, you'll have people on mainstream media who are, like, crying crocodile tears about January 6th. | ||
The imposition, the threat it posed to our sacred democracy, the house of our sacred, the temple of democracy that is the capital. | ||
It's like, wait, didn't you bomb it in the 80s? | ||
Like, wait, the person crying right now, didn't you set off a bomb there in the 80s as part of the weather underground before you got... | ||
Pardoned by Bill Clinton and now you run Black Lives Matter. | ||
Like, what the hell? | ||
You don't believe this crap. | ||
So, like, when they're crying these crocodile tears about the way the poor media is being mistreated, then the media is like, yeah, we actually are not so sure about this Kamala endorsement. | ||
And they're like, then you can burn. | ||
Then you can burn in hell, Washington Post. | ||
Like, they don't actually care about these things if they're not servicing their overall agenda. | ||
If they're not an active and unquestioning adherent To the mind virus, then it must be destroyed. | ||
So Jeff Bezos writes this article, The Hard Truth, Americans Don't Trust the News Media. | ||
A note from our owner. | ||
Jeff Bezos is the owner of Washington Post, and he says this, In annual public surveys about trust and reputation, journalists and the media have regularly fallen near the very bottom, often just above Congress. | ||
But in this year's Gallup poll, we managed to fall below Congress itself. | ||
Our profession is now the least trusted of all. | ||
Something we are doing is clearly not working. | ||
Now, we can keep going, but I think everything you need to know is in this first paragraph. | ||
I think I can answer all of your questions, Jeff, about what's going on here. | ||
First of all, pretty hilarious that he's talking about polls, I guess, comparing different groups of people, different professions, and their trustworthiness. | ||
Congress always very, very low. | ||
A little bit to be expected because half of the population is always going to distrust the representatives of the other half. | ||
Republicans are always going to distrust their Democratic congressmen, vice versa, and their politicians and you expect them to bend the truth or, you know, phrase things in a certain way. | ||
How amazing is it that the one profession that has now fallen under Congress Is the one profession whose entire point of existing is to tell the truth. | ||
I mean, that's the point of journalism. | ||
But every other profession ranks higher in truthfulness than journalists. | ||
Because Jeff, Jeff, pay attention when I tell you this. | ||
When you say something we're doing is clearly not working, that something is lying. | ||
It's lying. | ||
It's not working anymore. | ||
Now, if you told the truth, then you could be confused. | ||
Then you could act aggrieved. | ||
Then you could be baffled at this. | ||
You could say, look, we told the truth. | ||
People don't like it. | ||
Too bad. | ||
But what you were doing, that something you were doing that is clearly not working are the lies that you're telling. | ||
They clearly aren't being believed. | ||
It's not complicated. | ||
It's not difficult to understand. | ||
It's not... | ||
Sophisticated. | ||
Just tell the truth. | ||
Just stop lying repeatedly over and over every single day about everything. | ||
That's a start. | ||
And then maybe rebuild some of the trust that you have systematically eliminated over the last several decades. | ||
And you gotta understand what a crime this is. | ||
And this is why I sort of lament these major institutions falling into the hands of the people that run them now. | ||
I know I've told this before. | ||
My mom would always use the illustration for me. | ||
They're like trust. | ||
It's like building a wall or building a building and every act of trustworthiness is just a single brick. | ||
But every act of untrustworthiness is a giant sweeping wrecking ball that destroys all of the work you'd already done. | ||
So Washington Post, New York Times, these institutions spent decade upon decade upon decade outliving all of their competitors and Building up the trust and prestige and honor that they're supposed to then carry into the future and preserve for the further generations. | ||
But they decided it was so important to get Trump out that they were going to just sacrifice all of that. | ||
Like you spent decades putting pennies in a jar and now you're just going to break the jar and spin them all at once because it's just this important. | ||
Because you hate America and you hate Trump. | ||
And you're bad people. | ||
So, this shouldn't be a question. | ||
This isn't a question. | ||
It's kind of convoluted because now the people that are actually destroying Washington Post are their most loyal leftist adherents who are happy that they're using all of the accrued virtue of Washington Post and spending it all to try to destroy Donald Trump. | ||
They're happy about that, but that's the thing. | ||
That's what you've created by lying, by manipulating, by deceiving, by cheating. | ||
Creating and sowing this division in the American people and refusing to give even the slightest credence to the genuine concerns, genuine issues expressed by Trump and his supporters. | ||
You've created this class of rabid psychopaths who think and claim that they are championing democracy and free speech, but in reality will destroy you for even daring to not fully support them. | ||
You don't have to go against them, but if you aren't If you aren't sufficiently committed to their cause, then they'll destroy you outright. | ||
This is just another outgrowth of the, again, psychotic decade of lies that you've bombarded the American people with. | ||
We don't quite have time to go to it right now because I want to expand on it. | ||
We'll start the first five minutes with just another example, but I think a very good one in illustrating the The process that goes on with the media lies. | ||
It's the very fine people hoax. | ||
And I think Mays put together... | ||
Mays, a Twitter account, put together a compilation of Jake Tapper talking about the very fine people hoax. | ||
And we've talked about this many times. | ||
Because it's not necessarily like one big lie. | ||
Or it's not necessarily like getting one big story wrong. | ||
Like you can point back to some... | ||
Times in the past where a lie like that caused major damage in this country, the lie of weapons of mass destruction, right? | ||
That was like one big lie that everybody bought hook, line, and sinker, but some you could say were trusting in people they thought were trustworthy in the intelligence agencies. | ||
Some people knew they were lying, some people didn't. | ||
But, you know, even a lot of those places that did support it when it was revealed to be false, because they weren't lying on purpose, ostensibly, because they have... | ||
Whatever, you know, believable justification. | ||
They can say, well, we were lied to and this is terrible, and we're sorry that we lied to you, we were tricked. | ||
Won't happen again, sort of thing. | ||
But the lies that we're dealing with now are compounding interest. | ||
They tell one lie, and then they tell another lie, and then they tell another lie, and then they portray all of these lies as if they represent a pattern that It was really just a pattern of lies, and then because they've established the supposed pattern, the illusion, the deceit of a pattern, then they call you crazy for disbelieving it even though it was a lie the whole time. | ||
It's this feedback loop process that we go through that is actually destroying people's trust in media. | ||
Because we wouldn't even care that much if you've got things wrong sometimes, if you've got a different opinion than us. | ||
But it's the relentless cascade of lies and how every lie builds on every other lie. | ||
And then the fact that we don't believe the lies, being used to tell other lies about how we're in a cult, when all of your cult members will literally destroy your entire company for not sufficiently subjecting yourself to their preferred candidate. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Extended coverage begins next Monday, the 4th of November, 2024 at 8 a.m. | ||
Central, continuing throughout election week. | ||
We will, of course, be here on election night covering all the way until all the fraudulent ballots are covered, until all of the mysterious anomalies make themselves known, all of the vertical lines In the voting charts reveal themselves and the Democrats for what they are. | ||
Shameless cheaters. | ||
It really is shameless and it really is difficult to know how to deal with a population that we share a country with that is so divorced from reality. | ||
One of the best examples of this. | ||
Out of the myriad, I mean, there's almost an infinite number of choices to select from as what is the most egregious psyop pulled on the American people lie that continually is repeated over and over ad nauseum as if repetition itself confers legitimacy. | ||
The very fine people hoax. | ||
Let's go to clip number seven. | ||
Here's a little compilation. | ||
But pay attention to the process that takes place here. | ||
How the lie is then lied about and how if you don't believe the lie, they lie about you and try to imagine some motivation for you saying what you're saying despite the fact that what you're saying is the truth. | ||
You'll see what I mean. | ||
Let's go now to Jake Tapper. | ||
Lying. | ||
Do you have it? | ||
Okay, I'm being told we have it. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Run it, please. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
And you had some very bad people in that group, but you also had people that were very fine people on both sides. | ||
That was President Trump saying that very fine people were marching alongside neo-Nazis and skinheads and white supremacists. | ||
I've condemned neo-Nazis. | ||
I've condemned many different groups, but not all of those people We're neo-Nazis, believe me. | ||
Not all of those people were white supremacists. | ||
And you had people, and I'm not talking about the neo-Nazis and the white nationalists, because they should be condemned totally. | ||
But you had many people in that group other than neo-Nazis and white nationalists, okay? | ||
This is the president who said there were, quote, very fine people on both sides in a Charlottesville neo-Nazi clan march in Charlottesville and his infamous reference to very fine people. | ||
There were, quote, very fine people on both sides of that Charlottesville, Virginia march. | ||
And candidate Trump, I tried to get him three times to condemn David Duke. | ||
He wouldn't do it. | ||
Well, you've got David Duke just joined. | ||
A bigot, a racist, a problem. | ||
I mean, this is not exactly the people you want in your party. | ||
A lot of people think that he has a soft spot in his heart for Or at least won't condemn white supremacists. | ||
As I said on Saturday, we condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence. | ||
It has no place in America. | ||
Racism is evil. | ||
And those who cause violence in its name are criminals and thugs, including the KKK, neo-Nazis, white supremacists, and other hate groups that are repugnant to everything we hold dear as Americans. | ||
We are a nation founded on the truth that all of us are created equal. | ||
And there's this big effort by Trump supporters to pretend that the president didn't say what he said, to call this all a hoax. | ||
And you had people, and I'm not talking about the neo-Nazis and the white nationalists, because they should be condemned totally. | ||
But you had many people in that group other than neo-Nazis and white nationalists, okay? | ||
So I know we're retreading this same water over and over, but it's because they keep bringing it up over and over, over and over and over again. | ||
And I know you all understand if you're hearing me how frustrating it is that this just keeps happening over and over and that like something has to change here. | ||
Because what are you supposed to do when you just, even without being prompted, he's sitting there going, I condemn white supremacists, I condemn white nationalists. | ||
And then that night, Jake Tapper's up there going, why does he refuse to condemn white nationalists? | ||
You can sit there and go, I'm not Project 2025. | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
I've never read it. | ||
It's not mine. | ||
Only to have Kamala Harris release an ad that day that's like Project 2025 is Trump's. | ||
It's in his heart and soul, and it's his entire plan. | ||
You can read it for yourself, Project 2025. | ||
They just lie. | ||
They lie about lying. | ||
And when you tell them, hey, this isn't true, they go, the Trump supporters are trying to do a thing. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Second hour of The American Journal is on. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
I want to remind you, I think you have one day left. | ||
Go to thealexjonesstore.com and enter to win the incredible truck. | ||
That is now available for raffle. | ||
You can actually get a free entry to this just by signing up. | ||
No purchase necessary. | ||
But every dollar you spend on the store, you automatically are entered another chance to win this incredible truck. | ||
The truck giveaway on thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
It's coming to an end on Wednesday. | ||
tomorrow i just wanted to remind you of that you our listeners have kept us on air for nearly three decades and this is our way of giving back to you time is running out to enter to win the alex jones store on the alexjonesstore.com either by submitting your email or being automatically entered to win for every dollar you spend on the store so go there today | ||
check out the amazing shirts hats and supplements at the alexjonesstore.com and make sure you sign up for the alex jones vip club it costs 30 to join and you instantly get 40 in store credit And of course, when you spend that, every dollar you spend gets you another entry to win the truck. | ||
And I guess the prize drawing will be tomorrow. | ||
Or at least the contest will end tomorrow and the drawing will be shortly after that. | ||
We have a lot more stories to cover. | ||
I will be opening up the phone lines for your calls this hour. | ||
But I got some other videos to get to. | ||
Again, I don't think we need to spend too much time actually going over Jeff Bezos desperately trying to contend with the lack of trust in the mainstream media, the very appropriate and perfectly logical and reasonable mistrust that the American people have for the relentless liars in our media. | ||
But I do wonder how much of the seeming conversion that's taking place is legitimate amongst the big tech guys. | ||
I mean, you got Mark Zuckerberg out there. | ||
He, you know, gives us, he writes a thing where he apologizes very sincerely about, you know, censoring pertinent and factual revelations about Hunter Biden at the behest of the criminal class we call our government. | ||
He gave a speech, Zuckerberg gave a speech, or not a speech, but an interview where he's talking about Donald Trump getting shot in the ear and standing up and pumping his fist. | ||
That was the most badass thing he's ever seen. | ||
They're breaking away from the plantation a little bit. | ||
Jeff Bezos obviously owns Amazon, owns Washington Post. | ||
Do you think it was his divorce? | ||
Do you think he was seeing where his ex-wife is spending all of his money? | ||
Made him think extra hard about these things? | ||
Do you think it was the fact that the ideology of leftism single-handedly cost him billions of dollars and destroyed a cultural icon in Lord of the Rings as he paid good money for a show about the things Tolkien wrote about and instead got a steaming pile of feces with an Amazon logo on it? | ||
Was Rings of Power so bad it radicalized one of the richest and most powerful corporate bosses in the world to turn against them? | ||
It would be appropriate. | ||
It would be Tolkien-esque, even. | ||
Did Jeff Bezos become Bezos the White? | ||
We don't know. | ||
In this case, the Balrog would be a TV show, I guess. | ||
But it is funny how this is happening. | ||
And again, is it just total cynical strategy? | ||
Are they just seeing where the wind is blowing and want to get out in front of it, want to get on the good side of Trump before he wins? | ||
Want to signal to conservatives that... | ||
The last decade was they just went crazy again like you know like van jones said about 2020 you can't blame us for what we did back then we were all crazy everyone went crazy for a year you can't blame us for having terrible ideas and then attacking you for disagreeing with them we were all crazy It's like, well, not us. | ||
I mean, we never went crazy. | ||
Somehow we avoided going crazy. | ||
Somehow we avoided falling for all of the lies. | ||
Somehow we avoided hemorrhaging audience and being massively distrusted by our core fan base because we don't lie to them because we tell the truth and because we just think for ourselves. | ||
It's actually very, very simple. | ||
All of this is just mind-blowingly simple. | ||
But while we're on just in general the topic of just absurdity of the modern American landscape, I want to play a pair of videos. | ||
I probably wouldn't have played either one of these videos. | ||
You know, I come across God only knows how many dozens or hundreds of videos on a daily basis on X. And you get videos like this every once in a while. | ||
I don't usually bring them to air because independently they're not as important as you might think. | ||
You can make a big deal out of it, but at the end of the day... | ||
These are videos about crimes, local news reports about murders, and it's like, alright, I can't be covering every black-on-white murder or whatever. | ||
In this case, the opposite. | ||
But these two, I think, together tell a very disturbing story about where we are as Americans, where we're going, what the world under this... | ||
I don't even know what to call it anymore because it's not liberal. | ||
It's not even necessarily left, just this... | ||
Mind virus antichrist psychopathy that is running the world right now. | ||
Call it what you want, but this is the outcome. | ||
These two videos, I think, go very well together. | ||
This is what it's like under the police state of clowns that we live in right now, okay? | ||
Clip number nine was posted with the phrase, let's check in on Tim Waltz's city of Minneapolis and see how it's going there. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
This was a shocking moment caught on camera. | |
Video obtained by our NBC affiliate, Kara Levin, shows David Wattori trimming a tree outside his Minneapolis home Wednesday when, according to court documents, a bullet was fired from his neighbor's upstairs window. | ||
The bullet, like, went down through my neck and then... | ||
All the way back to my spine. | ||
Matori told NBC affiliate Kara Levin he's also recovering from broken ribs and a concussion. | ||
Adding, the last 11 months since he and his wife moved in, they've been living a nightmare next door to John Shawshack. | ||
Court documents show the victim called police 19 times prior to the shooting for incidents including harassment, hate speech and verbal threats. | ||
It also says Shawshack suffers from mental illness. | ||
Shawshack has been charged with attempted murder, but he is not in jail. | ||
Police allowing him to stay in his home because they say he's a threat to himself and others. | ||
The likelihood of an armed violent confrontation where we may have to use deadly force with the suspect in this case is high. | ||
That excuse sparking community outrage. | ||
We have to take violent criminals off the street. | ||
So I'm not a police officer. | ||
I don't know how that gets done, but I know it needs to get done. | ||
Police say Shawshank rarely leaves his home, and the department has not set an arrest date. | ||
We are not going to bust the door down, guns blazing, and get into a deadly source situation, but we will ensure the community will be safe. | ||
Matori says he feels the Minneapolis Police Department failed to protect his family by not arresting his neighbor when they needed them most. | ||
If you're saying you're scared, What does that do to me, you know? | ||
Like, you have this body armor, you have professional training. | ||
I mean, I don't even want to laugh. | ||
The man was shot in the neck, sniped from an upstairs window by his neighbor. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
But there's something supremely absurd. | ||
About the police saying this man is a threat to himself and others and that's why we let him go. | ||
I mean, what? | ||
unidentified
|
I think we should defund them further. | |
I mean, what is that? | ||
I tried to write down the exact quote. | ||
They are allowing him to stay in his home because he represents a threat to himself and others. | ||
Alright. | ||
So that's when you need the cops, right? | ||
This is when you actually want to have the government with sole monopolized use of force capability to deploy that capability against a psychopath that you've had to call the cops on 19 times and is sniping at you from his upstairs window. | ||
That's one of those things where it's like, People think libertarianism doesn't make any sense, but you can apply it to any situation like this one in particular. | ||
Where people might try to, well, doesn't he have a right to have a gun? | ||
Doesn't he have a right to whatever? | ||
And it's like, no, the man who was shot has a right to stand in his yard without being fired upon. | ||
You have a right to actually live in a place where you're not under constant assault. | ||
That's why we always say peace is a prerequisite to liberty. | ||
You're not free if you can't go outside without your insane neighbor taking a shot at you. | ||
You're not free, obviously. | ||
So in this case, you want the police to ensure freedom. | ||
You're free to go out and do yard work without taking sniper fire. | ||
So that's when you need the cops, when the cops have an active and dangerous threat. | ||
They'll tell you, we let him go because he's just too dangerous. | ||
The cop's going, we're not just going to bust in there. | ||
We're not just going to bust him in and arrest him. | ||
Are you crazy? | ||
It's like, that's... | ||
No, that's literally your job, actually. | ||
Actually, that is 100% the reason you exist. | ||
But okay, fine. | ||
That's what it's like in the modern police state, and you actually need help and defense from your insane armed neighbor. | ||
At exactly the same time, we go to New York City, where apparently now they have bicycle checks on Being conducted by people that don't speak English, but are wearing a badge. | ||
Let's go to clip number four here. | ||
Got a guy riding down the bike lane. | ||
New York now has bike checks. | ||
You see this guy being signaled. | ||
He pulls over. | ||
unidentified
|
Good morning, how are you? | |
Hello. | ||
You're doing delivery? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Okay. | ||
Do you have your pen? | ||
No, I don't have no paper. | ||
No paper. | ||
No, your bed. | ||
Okay. | ||
Your lights? | ||
Lights? | ||
Yes. | ||
Okay, very good. | ||
Do you have anything in detail? | ||
No. | ||
Nothing? | ||
Nothing. | ||
All right, that's good. | ||
Very good. | ||
Okay, so you have to make this? | ||
Yes. | ||
So for our radio listeners, what that was was some official with New York City who does not speak English making a Bicycle delivery man prove he has horns and lights and isn't listening to headphones. | ||
So this is the dichotomy. | ||
This is the modern anarcho-tyranny clown world police state that's being built around us. | ||
When you've got your neighbor firing shots off out of his upstairs window at you while you're mowing the lawn, the police can't do anything. | ||
And the guy's got a gun. | ||
We're just the police. | ||
What are we supposed to do? | ||
Go home. | ||
I guess just... | ||
It'll be like the Washington sniper days. | ||
Just hang up tarps all around your yard. | ||
Insane, right? | ||
So, if you need the police... | ||
They aren't going to do crap. | ||
They aren't going to do anything. | ||
Well, it's mental illness. | ||
Well, he can't be held to account. | ||
He's incompetent to stand trial. | ||
We can't go in there and arrest him. | ||
That's when you need the police and when they're actually asked to do the job for which their profession was designed. | ||
Meanwhile, you got some Eritrean guy miming his way through a traffic stop of a bicycle in New York City. | ||
Some foreigner, middle-aged man who arrived yesterday is now being asked to investigate whether bicycles have horns, and he doesn't know the word horn. | ||
He's miming it. | ||
He's going, do you have... | ||
And the guy's like, my papers? | ||
I don't have papers. | ||
No, no, the... | ||
unidentified
|
This is the world. | |
This is the world we're creating. | ||
This is what it's going to be like from now on. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, you might get pulled over in America by some foreigner demanding to know that you are carrying around your clown horn. | ||
He'll write you a ticket if you're not, I imagine. | ||
Like, you see videos like this all the time. | ||
Something about, because it just happened to me, it happened to be today that I saw these two videos back-to-back where it was like, one was just like, wow, cops are worthless. | ||
They do nothing. | ||
They're not even arresting a guy who fired at his neighbor. | ||
Like, they sent him home. | ||
They sent him back to the place where he had previously set up a sniper's nest, shoot his neighbor while he was doing yard work, F the cops, and then The next video I see is, again, some foreign dude. | ||
I mean, the idea that you have a foreigner that doesn't even speak English with a badge issuing citations to people about their bicycle accessories. | ||
What the hell are we doing? | ||
What is this? | ||
What is this? | ||
You want to have... | ||
Authoritarian measures. | ||
You want to have checkpoints where we make sure your clown horn is appropriately goofy. | ||
You got to provide us with the corresponding safety. | ||
I mean, you can have anarchy, you can have tyranny. | ||
We don't want both. | ||
We don't want whatever this is. | ||
Like seriously, if you want to have Cameroonian horn checkers who don't know the word horn patrolling the streets of America Could we at least not get murdered on our front steps? | ||
Would you mind if we could go shopping without having to ask for the key to open the plexiglass barrier to get our chips? | ||
Do you have the honk honk? | ||
We got more honk than we know what to do with, folks. | ||
We're honking ourselves to death over here. | ||
So. | ||
So my political ideology is whatever gets us out of whatever that is. | ||
unidentified
|
Good Lord. | |
Good lord. | ||
Okay. | ||
Still a lot of videos to show you. | ||
We're just going to go to this one real quick because it's It's Jon Stewart showing why in some ways he was a force for good when he was still a culturally important figure on The Daily Show. | ||
Because say what you will about him, he told the truth sometimes. | ||
And I kind of respect that. | ||
Here's Jon Stewart talking about the Overwrought, panicking, the shrieking fanaticism of the left as they called Donald Trump a Nazi for hosting his rally in Madison Square Garden and were fainting on their fainting couches about the temerity, the shock at having a comedian make fun of Puerto Ricans. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
How dare he? | ||
Let's watch. | ||
Here's the alarms. | ||
unidentified
|
The opening act, grabbing headlines for all the wrong reasons. | |
A comedian who offered unfunny, racist, cringeworthy jokes. | ||
Basically calling Puerto Ricans trash. | ||
The most repulsive racial jokes about Latinos. | ||
Disgusting and hateful. | ||
unidentified
|
So incredibly crude. | |
Frankly, just too X-rated to play here. | ||
Extremely vile so-called jokes. | ||
Extremely vile so-called jokes. | ||
She name-checked my comedy album from the '90s. | ||
unidentified
|
Did I... | |
Did I really...? | ||
*applause* I don't know who's AI, me or that guy. | ||
Now, obviously, in retrospect, having a roast comedian come to a political rally a week before Election Day and roasting a key voting demographic, probably not the best decision by the campaign politically. | ||
But to be fair, the guy's really just doing what he does. | ||
I mean, here he is at the Tom Brady roast a few months ago. | ||
The great Jeff Ross, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Jeff is so Jewish, he only watches football for the coin toss. | ||
Gronk, you look like the Nazi that kept burning himself on the ovens. | ||
Kevin is so small that when his ancestors picked cotton, they called it deadlifting. | ||
Yes, yes, of course. | ||
Terrible boo, yes. | ||
unidentified
|
There's something wrong with me. | |
I find that guy very funny. | ||
So, I'm sorry. | ||
I don't know what to tell you. | ||
I mean, bringing him to a rally and have him not do roast jokes? | ||
That'd be like bringing Beyonce to a rally and not have... | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
Pretty good. | ||
Pretty good stuff. | ||
And I mean, you know, Cunningham's Cliff, take him or leave him, whatever. | ||
He's pretty funny. | ||
To act outraged by his set is a little bit hilarious. | ||
I mean, the joke that everybody was up in arms about was not even an original joke. | ||
I think that was his mistake. | ||
His mistake was that he used a meme template and changed it. | ||
I've seen it a lot. | ||
I've seen it for, like, years. | ||
It's a very simple joke. | ||
There's a giant trash island in the middle of the ocean. | ||
Did you know that? | ||
It's called the UK. I always heard it with the UK. Which I thought where he was going with that. | ||
We said Puerto Rico instead, and that is not allowed. | ||
That is not allowed. | ||
They're brown. | ||
You can't make fun of them. | ||
You can't make fun of the brown people. | ||
They're brown, okay? | ||
White people, they're fine, okay? | ||
You can make fun of them all you want because of how awesome they are. | ||
They don't care. | ||
The brown people, you can't make fun of them. | ||
I think you can make fun of everybody. | ||
I think you can make fun of everybody, actually. | ||
That's how it works. | ||
I'm going to go down to clip number 10 here because things are changing. | ||
People are sick of the left. | ||
They're sick of the stupidity across the board. | ||
And it's gotten so bad that you got people like this walking around NYC talking about how they and all of their friends are voting Trump. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
I have a resume that you can't believe. | |
So my fiance was asking me, she goes, lifelong New Yorker, lifelong Democrat. | ||
She's never voted. | ||
She's voting for the first time. | ||
We've got a huge social circle. | ||
She's brought over maybe a hundred people. | ||
Never voted. | ||
They're all going to vote. | ||
They're all going to vote for Trump. | ||
What asked me the other day was, well, what's going to happen on day one if Kamala gets in? | ||
Look what's happened in New York under Mayor Adams. | ||
We're going to start feeling the pain, more of the pain, with our paychecks, our taxes, our freedom of speech, at the grocery store, the lack of getting jobs. | ||
I have a resume that you can't believe. | ||
I have not been able to get a job two years. | ||
IT. I founded three companies. | ||
One went to NASDAQ. I've been actively searching for a job now for almost two years. | ||
I can't even get an interview. | ||
And I've got a resume that's crazy. | ||
Yeah, we're flipping the whole country. | ||
It's going to be a landslide. | ||
It's going to be amazing. | ||
God bless Donald Trump. | ||
We're going to do it. | ||
Or they're going to cheat. | ||
And then it's really on. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Stay with us. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Welcome back, folks. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
I think I'll wait to open up the phone lines until after we have our guest. | ||
We're going to be joined by Noel Fritsch in the next hour to talk about a very interesting tactic being discussed. | ||
On how to deal with the hurricane-damaged areas of North Carolina and some other southeast states that might not be able to get things up and running in time to provide a legitimate and thorough election count. | ||
So, very excited to talk to him. | ||
But we'll have 30 minutes on the other side to take your phone calls there. | ||
And I still have a few more videos to get to, including ones that seem to portend some Bad things that are going to happen very shortly. | ||
I'll get to those in just a second. | ||
But let's keep it light for a moment. | ||
As light as we can. | ||
If we're going to laugh at Kamala just being a child, just having the brain of a child, which is funny... | ||
Except that she might run the country, which is not funny. | ||
But let's go to this video, because Kamala Harris did a tour of a semiconductor plant, and there's this clip from her tour. | ||
tour. | ||
Let's watch clip 14. | ||
unidentified
|
Here is actually a harvested euron where we actually do grow it. | |
So this is what it looks like when it comes out. | ||
Do not touch it. | ||
Do not. | ||
Please do not touch it. | ||
And in the top one, it's very sharp. | ||
Yeah, very sharp. | ||
Okay. | ||
So with that being said. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know why, but that cracks me up. | |
I mean, it's... | ||
And let's be fair. | ||
I try to look at everything fairly. | ||
You know, there's some things you see, and, you know, the first instinct is just to mock Kamala Harris. | ||
For being like a child. | ||
And maybe this is what was so funny to me. | ||
Is literally yesterday, I was trying to... | ||
My son's three and a half years old. | ||
And I was like, do you want to see how records work? | ||
We have a record player. | ||
I thought he would think it was cool to show him how they wrecked, but I was like, but it's very delicate, and you can't touch it. | ||
It's just one of those classic scenes where every about 10 seconds, I'm like, don't touch it. | ||
Stop touching it, though. | ||
Just stop touching it. | ||
How many times do I have to say? | ||
Just don't touch it. | ||
Just look. | ||
Just don't touch it, please. | ||
It's just something about Kamala Harris. | ||
Just, oh, can I touch it? | ||
They're like, don't, don't. | ||
Let's not touch anything. | ||
Thank you, Vice President. | ||
Please don't touch the stuff. | ||
Please don't destroy the millions of dollars of work that we're trying to show you. | ||
No, just don't. | ||
Just don't. | ||
But hey, being totally fair, I could see Trump doing this exact thing in a way. | ||
Right? | ||
I want to touch it. | ||
It looks nice. | ||
I'm going to touch it, actually. | ||
Don't tell me not to touch things. | ||
I'll touch whatever I want. | ||
But I don't know, something about that just cracks me up. | ||
Can I touch it? | ||
No, you cannot, ma'am. | ||
Why do you want to touch it? | ||
That's what cracks me up. | ||
Why does she want to touch it? | ||
What does she think? | ||
It is like a very childish thing. | ||
unidentified
|
She'd be like, but I want to touch it. | |
Like, that is a semiconductor chip. | ||
I wonder, I mean, I don't know if it's because it's extremely delicate and it would destroy the thing that they made. | ||
Which is hilarious. | ||
Could also be that it's... | ||
I don't know what it is. | ||
Maybe it's plugged in. | ||
Maybe there's some deadly amount of electricity running through it. | ||
We don't know. | ||
But maybe... | ||
Maybe keep her on a leash. | ||
Maybe don't let her go walking around these places. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Oh, man. | ||
Okay, we got... | ||
We got one more... | ||
Video that again... | ||
Is it newsworthy? | ||
I think so. | ||
I think so. | ||
Because we're talking about being a week away from the American people exercising their rights in our sacred democracy to have a say in the future of our country. | ||
And this is something we're expected to respect. | ||
And act as though it's necessary for the proper function of our government, that absolutely everybody with no restrictions, maybe according to the Democrats, not even by citizenship, as to who gets to make the ultimate choices for the fate of our country. | ||
And the people that we're talking about I genuinely don't understand how people function. | ||
Not to brag, not to toot my own horn, but I got a pretty high IQ. I'm doing okay. | ||
I can figure things out. | ||
I can do math in my head. | ||
I can do it. | ||
But there are times where I'm trying to do things that the government makes you do, like taxes or filling out voter stuff. | ||
I mean, there are just so many examples. | ||
And I'm just like, what is going on? | ||
I cannot figure this out. | ||
I'm just reading instructions and it's like, fill out the top part of the ballot. | ||
If you are doing this, then you don't need the top of the ballot filled out. | ||
And write in your name unless... | ||
You've already written in your name, but definitely write in your name twice. | ||
And there are just things where I'm like, okay, I feel dumb reading this. | ||
Like, I don't understand it. | ||
And there are just so many times when you're dealing with the sort of bureaucracy stuff, when things are worded weirdly, and you just go, okay... | ||
I'm a pretty smart dude, and I cannot figure out what the hell it's asking me to do here. | ||
I cannot figure out what it is I'm supposed to do with this form. | ||
I'm sure I can remember the exact form I'm thinking about, but my wife and I, we're both reading it going, but it says not to fill it out, but then here it says to fill it out. | ||
What are we supposed to do? | ||
And you just think, how do dumb people get through that? | ||
I mean, how do people... | ||
Who literally don't know 10 times 10. | ||
Maybe I just need to go to the video. | ||
Like, how do they deal with this? | ||
How do they exist? | ||
How do they get loans for cars? | ||
Like, I don't understand how you can function in the world today without not just knowledge, but basic intellect. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
These are the people that are voting. | ||
Let's go to clip number five here. | ||
Intelligence on display in New York City. | ||
Let's watch and pray. | ||
unidentified
|
Do you know who the first female vice president was? | |
No. | ||
Have we had one yet? | ||
No. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Probably don't. | ||
I don't pay attention to presidents. | ||
Do you know what time zone we're in right now? | ||
We're in, um, 2020s. | ||
Do you know how long one decade is? | ||
Fifty. | ||
Fifty? | ||
You have to guess how long do you have to live, like, after you ingest H2O? One more time. | ||
Like, the chemical formula, like, H2O, too high to do than an oxygen. | ||
How long do you have to live until, like, you get in trouble? | ||
One minute. | ||
It's dangerous, right? | ||
Have you ever had? | ||
unidentified
|
It's ten times ten times ten. | |
Ten times ten times ten. | ||
How round do I? Give me your best guess. | ||
Ten times ten. | ||
Ten. | ||
You know this. | ||
You know this. | ||
What is he counting on his fingers? | ||
Shit. | ||
unidentified
|
Shit. | |
Niggas don't even know that. | ||
Guess. | ||
Guess the number. | ||
What do you think it is? | ||
Around what? | ||
Is it around 300? | ||
Yes. | ||
It's around 300. | ||
10 times 10 times 10. | ||
I get how you'd come to 300, because there's three 10s there. | ||
Now, I get it. | ||
I understand the logic there. | ||
The thing is, he didn't know 10 times 10. | ||
I'll give you the benefit of the doubt. | ||
10 times 10 times 10. | ||
Well, now you've got to think. | ||
First, you've got to do the first part, and then you've got to do the third part. | ||
Give me a piece of paper, I can work it out. | ||
In the head, I get it. | ||
It's kind of confusing. | ||
But he breaks it down to what is 10 times 10? | ||
He has no idea. | ||
And then he starts counting on his fingers. | ||
What are you doing? | ||
That's not how you do. | ||
Multiplication. | ||
What are you counting? | ||
This is what I mean. | ||
I'm not just... | ||
I don't... | ||
I'm not just trying to condemn people. | ||
unidentified
|
I just want to call people stupid. | |
But how do you run a country when adults... | ||
Don't know what 10 times 10 is? | ||
Serious question. | ||
How does a society function when you are graduating people from high school who don't know 10 times 10? | ||
It's 100, by the way. | ||
Times 10 is 1,000. | ||
In case you didn't know. | ||
In case you're on your way to vote. | ||
So, I don't know. | ||
You know, I don't know what the solution is. | ||
But maybe to vote, maybe that's the question you need to answer. | ||
What is 10 times 10 times 10? | ||
Like, can we just have a bare minimum level of IQ before you start having an equal say in the conduct of our entire nation? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Can we have basic standards? | ||
What if our schools did things like gave grades and then failed people that didn't achieve basic requirements? | ||
Like, what if we did something like that? | ||
This is the thing. | ||
We have a system that's predicated on and reliant on an informed and just vaguely intelligent populace. | ||
When you have people that think Pluto is a country, I don't know how you do that. | ||
I just don't know anymore. | ||
And of course, the thing you have to realize as you look into how we got this far... | ||
Is that if you are a tyrant, if you're a despot, if you want to exploit and extract resources from and oppress people, you want them to be dumb. | ||
It's by design that they're dumb. | ||
You don't teach your slaves to read, right? | ||
You don't want them having ideas. | ||
What did Stalin say? | ||
An idea is more dangerous than a gun. | ||
I don't let people have guns. | ||
Why would I let them have ideas? | ||
Yeah, we got a big issue here. | ||
And again, the reason is because people in power know something very simple. | ||
It's an information war. | ||
It's an information war, and you win this war by keeping your opponents low information. | ||
If you have the information and they don't, you have an advantage that cannot be overcome. | ||
And it's the model that has allowed for the longest lasting and most stable civilizations of all time, like ancient Egypt. | ||
If you look at ancient Egypt, that lasted for thousands of years, where you could have A dozen centuries in between time A and time B and nothing has changed. | ||
Nothing has changed. | ||
The style hasn't changed. | ||
The art hasn't changed. | ||
The government hasn't changed. | ||
They want a state of permanence in their control system. | ||
They want a worldwide government system that can be perpetual forever and What that means is that you never run the risk of revolution. | ||
No group of people is ever able to gain the power or influence or knowledge to overthrow the ruling class. | ||
And they do that by withholding all of the knowledge, by keeping all of the knowledge strictly contained within the ruling class. | ||
That was the way Egypt did it. | ||
And you do it through superstitions, but it's really an incredibly common method of control. | ||
From all over the world, anywhere in the world, Egypt is maybe just the best example, but, you know, the classic sort of, I don't know, cheesy, like, typical example would be the priest class that knows when the eclipse is going to happen so they can pretend to have magic powers, right, and say, I have great power, I will now blot out the sun, and the moon goes in front of the sun, nobody freaks out. | ||
But it's really just because you have the knowledge, you have the information, you have the secrets that they don't. | ||
And that gives you power over them one way or another. | ||
This is a very interesting You know, psychological reality that's on display in clip 13. | ||
We may have played this before, but I think it's worth revisiting. | ||
Again, as a corollary to the video that we saw of the people who don't know what 10 plus 10 or 10 times 10 is and think Pluto is a country... | ||
I think you'd die if you drink water. | ||
Let's go to clip 13 here and see how information, any information, when hoarded by one group and kept away from another, gives the informed group inordinate power. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
Have you ever heard of a game called Werewolf? | |
No. | ||
Everyone gets a piece of paper. | ||
It's either got villager written on it, but two have the word werewolf. | ||
Someone runs the game to make sure no one's cheating, and they go, okay, it's nighttime, everyone close your eyes. | ||
Werewolves choose someone to kill, and the werewolves go... | ||
They say, okay, everyone close your eyes, it's morning time, open them again. | ||
During the night, Francis was killed. | ||
There's then a conversation, and this is where it gets interesting, between all the villagers and the two werewolves... | ||
Over who the werewolves are. | ||
Then at the end of the day, the villagers have to decide who they're going to kill. | ||
And they say, well, we're going to kill Constance. | ||
It's revealed by the person running the game, I'm afraid Constance was a villager. | ||
And the game continues. | ||
The villagers win the game if they kill both werewolves. | ||
The werewolves win the game if they kill all but two villagers. | ||
And the werewolves usually win. | ||
The game was invented by a student of sociology in Russia who wanted to prove his thesis that an uninformed majority will always lose a battle of information against an informed minority. | ||
So that just shows, when you have hidden information, you can completely manipulate a large group of people. | ||
Again, the lessons from that game are on display fully in the modern American life. | ||
An informed minority can always exercise power over an uninformed majority. | ||
This is the information war. | ||
This is why Alex Jones called this outlet Infowars because he identified long before practically anybody else, certainly anybody in the public eye, how deliberate this was, how purposeful the ignorance of the American people has been. | ||
And there's so many different ways that That this is used, right? | ||
Because it's not just destroying the education system, especially by framing incompatible results as some sort of bias or racism that then has to be rooted out. | ||
You've got school districts all over the country, especially in places like Oregon and California, a place on the West Coast, getting rid of grades, I was just reading about a new grading system where instead of A, B, C, D, it's these words that are engaging, exploring, falling behind, but not even falling behind because even that is a little too judgmental. | ||
If you can't give bad grades, if you can't withhold creditation, You know, withhold the diploma because somebody has not shown that they've achieved the necessary education to be granted that. | ||
But then you make the diploma worthless. | ||
And so obviously the school system plays a big part in just dumbing down in general as being the organization responsible for the education of America. | ||
Not fulfilling that obligation leaves all of us disadvantaged. | ||
But then you've also got the media. | ||
Celebrating ignorance, whether they know it or not. | ||
The movies, the TV shows, the music, encouraging a life of just thoughtlessness and whatever, carnal pleasure, whatever you want to call it. | ||
But all of these things are not things that the people running them subject their own children to. | ||
Like how Steve Jobs... | ||
Never gave his children iPhones because they know that it's not good for you. | ||
They know that it's bad for you. | ||
They know that these things are going to lessen your ability to contend with the world and achieve power, gain influence, whatever it is. | ||
And so they withhold the information from the masses while retaining it for themselves, getting power for themselves over the masses. | ||
It's very simple. | ||
It's an information war. | ||
And that's that. | ||
And in this information war, we have an interesting development more coming out about Jeff Bezos and the Washington Post. | ||
Jeff Bezos is apparently doubling down. | ||
This is being reported by Bad Hombre on X at Joma underscore GC. He says, in a meeting this morning with leftist journalists threatening a walkout unless he reverses course and endorses Kamala Harris immediately, he told them they can F off and WAPO will be hiring more Trump-friendly conservative voices and they can pound sand. | ||
We love this for the joyless coconut team. | ||
And just about every response I'm seeing is people going, too little, too late, dude. | ||
We're never going to trust you again. | ||
It doesn't matter how many supposed conservative or Trump supporters you hire, how many rhinos you employ. | ||
You have destroyed yourself. | ||
You have destroyed your institution. | ||
You have destroyed a mainstay of American journalism through your relentless partisanship. | ||
And by hiring... | ||
Nothing but leftists who only hire leftists in the extremism of their positions. | ||
It's on display for everybody to see. | ||
There is no coming back from this. | ||
I hope they realize. | ||
And nobody trusts them, right? | ||
You've proven yourself so untrustworthy. | ||
You've proven yourself year over year over year as being so misaligned with American values. | ||
That even attempts to bring in conservatives and Trump supporters, even like legitimate, heartfelt, whatever attempts to moderate your coverage, we don't trust it. | ||
We know what you people are like. | ||
We know how you people feel. | ||
We saw you celebrating after a Trump supporter was shot at one of his rallies. | ||
Do you think we're going to just forget all of that? | ||
You think we're going to forget the last several years? | ||
I mean, you wanted to put us in camps. | ||
We're not taking a shot that you now admit doesn't do anything. | ||
You think we're just going to trust you because you pretend to put on a red hat? | ||
Wave the American flag on your surfboard, Mark Zuckerberg? | ||
No, we know. | ||
We know what you're like and we're not falling for it. | ||
So, like, this is why we tried to warn you, actually. | ||
We tried to tell you this. | ||
We tried to explain to you the importance of free speech, why you have to be balanced in the coverage. | ||
Like, we've had to argue against your lies continuously. | ||
Because once you go down this road, total partisanship, total untrustworthiness, When you surrender your entire organization to far leftists, it's going to die. | ||
It's going to be destroyed. | ||
It's not going to exist into the future. | ||
One way or another. | ||
One way or another. | ||
Because these people are bad people. | ||
It's not really that complicated. | ||
Like, you hired a bunch of goblins... | ||
And then are wondering why the ship is going down. | ||
It's like, well, you hired a bunch of goblins. | ||
What were you thinking? | ||
There were non-goblins available for hire. | ||
You went with the goblins. | ||
So, either the goblins are going to destroy you from the inside out, which they have, or you're going to go ask for rescue from the humans who don't want anything to do with you because you've clearly sided with the goblins in the past. | ||
So, Enjoy being goblins. | ||
You know, this is just, that's it. | ||
It's over. | ||
You did this. | ||
This also just broke. | ||
Joe Rogan posted this yesterday, I guess. | ||
He says, for the record, the Harris campaign has not passed on doing the podcast. | ||
They offered a date for Tuesday, but I would have had to travel to her and they only wanted to do an hour. | ||
I strongly feel the best way to do this is in the studio in Austin. | ||
My sincere wish is to just have a nice conversation and get to know her as a human being. | ||
I really hope we can make it happen. | ||
So... | ||
You know, the rumor was that the Harris campaign had rejected his invitation because she was scared to do three hours. | ||
And, of course, the response to this is like, genuinely, dude, she is the vice president of the United States and you are a podcaster. | ||
This is absolute diva behavior. | ||
No, it's a scam by the Kamala Harris campaign. | ||
It's a scam so they can say, we tried to do the Joe Rogan podcast, but he wouldn't work with us. | ||
We sincerely wanted to, knowing full well that if you're like, hey, Joe, why don't you have to travel to us and we'll only do an hour? | ||
The answer is no. | ||
Obviously. | ||
Obviously not. | ||
No other person would be expected to do that. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back, folks. | |
Third hour of American Journal is on. | ||
I'll be joined by my guests very shortly. | ||
But first, I want to go to at least a portion of the latest undercover video from Louder with Crowder. | ||
This video, just released by Stephen Crowder, shows alleged election manipulation by Georgia Democratic operatives. | ||
The whole video is about nine minutes, but we'll play the first half here. | ||
This is the latest from Stephen Crowder undercover, exposing the steal that cost us 2020 and may very well cost us 2024. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
I liked the whole thing with the Dome, what they was counting on. | |
You know, that was the big thing here, was the counting of the ballots at the Dome. | ||
They was all counting the ballots. | ||
They told them that it was a leak on the opposite side of the Dome. | ||
Everybody needed to evacuate. | ||
So then when they all left, the Democrats went back in and started counting, and the Republicans went back to the headquarters. | ||
You know that for a fact? | ||
That's what happened, yeah. | ||
They made it seem like they legitimately had leak issues. | ||
Yeah, so they had to say there was leak issues. | ||
So you see them on the video putting everything up and they left. | ||
No, they put someone on putting stuff up and then you see them leaking. | ||
Then they was out in the parking lot when I guess they told them they could come back in. | ||
Oh, they was out in the parking lot and they was going to go back to headquarters. | ||
And so the Republicans left. | ||
The Republican watchers, they all left. | ||
And so after they left, the Democrats went back in there and started counting. | ||
So that's the videotapes. | ||
You see them walking back in, pulling the shit out from underneath the tables. | ||
And during that hour, and then the other thing, the other part was that when they We're counting, I think, during that hour, that stretch of that. | ||
It was only, like, less than 100 folks was counting for Trump. | ||
And just statistically, you're downtown, there's going to be more than 100 votes for Trump. | ||
That's what happened in 2020, because that's when the ballots, and they started stuffing them ballots, and he was stuffing them ballots, and they got videotaped on it. | ||
But nobody talks about it. | ||
That's why Trump's been making that big deal about it. | ||
You see it on videotapes. | ||
We see a man pull up and put 100 ballots in his box. | ||
You know, he paid good s***. | ||
So Bruce is paying people to do just that. | ||
Drop off ballots. | ||
Go around, collect ballots. | ||
Collect absentee ballots. | ||
Drop them off. | ||
How did that even work? | ||
Okay, so if you're paying someone. | ||
I'm not trying to do this, trust me. | ||
But if you're a girl and you're paying someone to pick up the absentee ballots, do Do people take their absentee ballots to the orgs and then the orgs distribute the pay? | ||
That's confusing. | ||
It doesn't make sense. | ||
No, it's like, let's say you're my camister, I tell you, you go around and pick up these absentee ballots from this area. | ||
You know, you go pick them all up, drop them off in the box. | ||
You know, no different. | ||
I pay every week like the campus. | ||
You just get paid like the campus. | ||
You know, you're on the clock for hours, every hour, driving around, picking up absentee ballots and putting them in ballot boxes. | ||
What information do you need to actually know that these are certain areas that have a lot of absentee ballots? | ||
Oh, I mean, that's the case. | ||
You would just have to have, you would either have to reach it, like some groups would reach out to folks beforehand so they would pass them out to other people and then coming back and getting them all. | ||
Going down to a senior house, give everybody a ballot and come back and collect all their ballots and turn it in on. | ||
And then you take the ballots and then drop them off. | ||
And then the groups would have whoever, the canvassers go and pick them up and then take them straight. | ||
You can't do that. | ||
That's the legal part. | ||
So think about it like this if you're going to steal a election. | ||
Let's say Georgia is the perfect example. | ||
You're going to steal a election. | ||
Here you're not going to go to the outside. | ||
They're a different kind of party. | ||
They're not going to go outside of Atlanta or outside of metro Atlanta and change the numbers in public counties, right? | ||
Because that shit would just be two bodies. | ||
Change the numbers in your home. | ||
You're going to fluctuate these numbers because it'll just be the same. | ||
It makes more sense to do it in Atlanta. | ||
It hides better. | ||
So if somebody's coming behind you and saying, well, you know, you've been stealing votes, the first place they're going to look is in the outlying counties where it's rated. | ||
Don't change those numbers, right? | ||
because that county has always been ready to boot. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, third hour of American Journal is on for this Tuesday morning broadcast. | ||
I'm very happy to welcome my guest, Noel Fritsch. | ||
He is an author and investigative journalist. | ||
He's with us today to discuss how people in disaster areas who are left behind by the Biden-Harris administration will vote on Election Day, whether they'll be able to vote, and what's being done about it. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us, Noel. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, happy to be here. | |
Thanks for having me. | ||
Yeah, thank you very much for coming on. | ||
And I should say, if you want to follow you, they can follow you on X at Noel Fritch. | ||
Tell us about this story. | ||
The title is U.S. Constitution allows North Carolina legislature to award electors to Donald Trump in 2020. | ||
What does this mean? | ||
How would this work? | ||
What is this about? | ||
unidentified
|
Alright, so first it's really important to note that it's not just North Carolina, it's actually all of the legislatures that have the ability to, vested in each legislature, is the ability to directly appoint electors to the Electoral College. | |
And Harrison, this was done normally, it was de rigueur for over 100 years after the founding of this republic. | ||
And the reason that we're reporting it from the angle of North Carolina is that, of course, there's Hurricane Helene, which destroyed, you know, 25 of the 100 Western counties here in North Carolina. | ||
And everybody probably knows by now that those Western counties are very favorable to Donald Trump. | ||
Donald Trump held a 200,000, almost 200,000 vote advantage in those 25 Western counties, even with the two heavy Democrat counties, Watauga and Asheville over there. | ||
And so you've got Trump only won in 2020 by 74,481 votes, Harrison. | ||
And so we had already started in North Carolina early voting. | ||
There's no way that it's even possible to have a fair election in North Carolina because you had ballots out, ballots ruined. | ||
Some ballots had been mailed back. | ||
There's no guarantee that we're going to be able to guarantee a chain of custody and an accurate vote tally here in North Carolina. | ||
And so the idea was put forth, of course, that these these legislators can directly appoint the electors. | ||
Now, it's constitutional. | ||
This is in the Constitution. | ||
Article two, section one, clause two of the United States Constitution. | ||
And it's all right there in the article you just put up on the screen. | ||
And these are not my ideas. | ||
These are not like novel new ideas. | ||
And by the way, the whole of the leftist media now is going apoplectic. | ||
There's it's all over The New York Times and CNN. | ||
They're all losing their junk, OK, because they know that this is the case politically. | ||
Politico covered it. | ||
We were on the top of Drudge. | ||
I actually are reporting by way of USA Today. | ||
Of course, they don't want to link us over at my website. | ||
They they want to talk about the USA Today coverage, where, of course, they say that if you talk about this, you're a terrorist. | ||
OK, that's the new leftist drudge that we have. | ||
But we were over there on Friday night. | ||
They're all losing it because they know this is a fact. | ||
By the way, the Constitution doesn't say that the state legislatures have to go through the governor. | ||
It just says the state legislature can directly appoint the electors. | ||
So this is the silver bullet, Harrison, for all of this election fraud and nonsense. | ||
Every state in every state legislature in the union has the power to directly appoint the electors. | ||
OK, that represent that state to the Electoral College when we have that federal presidential election. | ||
It's a nationwide federal election. | ||
It's not just one election. | ||
It's very important to note this is 50 elections, and that's what they're working so hard to cover up after January the 6th with their phony, bogus insurrection narrative. | ||
They just don't want the United States citizens to know that what was happening there that day is the official proceeding that they were trying to block and obstruct, okay? | ||
And so, look, in this union, we've had these direct appointment of electors for 100 years after the founding, and This is not just like some, you know, pre-modern era novel idea. | ||
This happened for a hundred years. | ||
And by the way, the majority of the state legislatures used to do this. | ||
The vast majority, like two-thirds of the state legislatures used to merely just directly appoint their electors. | ||
And then what happened, Harrison, is The politicians learned that they could avoid accountability. | ||
And what do I mean by that? | ||
Well, they learned that they could put it to a vote in the populace. | ||
They could have a popular election. | ||
We didn't have popular elections of senators and presidents like we do now back in the day. | ||
The state legislature would handle it. | ||
And once these politicians learned that they could pass the buck and shifted the accountability over to the people, they could wash their hands of it and say, I'm out. | ||
And They really like that idea. | ||
So that's how we got popular, these popular elections. | ||
Well, we don't have to do that. | ||
The Constitution says that the legislatures are in charge. | ||
Yeah, it looks like maybe the video... | ||
unidentified
|
...intended this representation to work. | |
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
It looks like we're having a little bit of trouble with the connection, and hopefully you can hear me, Noel. | ||
Noel Fritsch is my guest. | ||
Again, the article says, Now, I've talked about this in terms of the way... | ||
That America has been moving away from republicanism and towards democracy for a very long time. | ||
And it just so happened to be that fateful year, 1913, that the 17th Amendment was put into place. | ||
It used to be that senators from states were selected only by the legislature. | ||
And it was with the 17th Amendment that that went to a popular vote. | ||
Happened to be the same year the IRS was created and the income tax and the Federal Reserve. | ||
And coincidentally, the ADL for that matter. | ||
And it was the year before World War I, obviously. | ||
But to me, it's much easier to rig one big populist contest with the whole state and everybody voting. | ||
We're seeing the way that they're rigging it now. | ||
But even just in terms of if you own a couple newspapers and can get a message across to try to sway a huge amount of people, we know. | ||
I mean, it's one of these strange things about democracy versus other forms of government. | ||
Governments, you would think that having a big population with lots of different people all, you know, trying to get to the truth, you would get better results. | ||
But what that really means in practice a lot of times is whoever can just convince the most number of people, whatever, whoever can get the biggest crowd can win. | ||
It has nothing to do with what's right or wrong. | ||
Republicanism is the idea that you vote for your state legislature and you trust them to make choices as to who should be senator. | ||
And if you don't like their choice for senator, then you vote against them in the legislature. | ||
It brings things more local. | ||
It's more decentralized. | ||
I actually like it more because I think it'd be harder to rig 100 different state legislature races than one big state race. | ||
And so this has been going on for a long time. | ||
It was 1913 that senators started to be popularly elected rather than appointed by the state legislature. | ||
Does this have to do with that or is that a different instance because it's senators versus presidents? | ||
Does that play into it or am I totally off the mark here? | ||
unidentified
|
Exact same concept, Harrison. | |
Exactly right. | ||
It's no coincidence that After the Civil War, look, it's not a huge time span between the end of the Civil War and then when this sort of the end of the direct appointment of electors sort of began, which is in the 1870s, and then just, you know, 35 years later or so when the same concept was applied to the senators, right? | ||
This is the same era. | ||
These guys in this robber baron era figured out that they could buy these representatives, and then the representatives could be sort of paid to essentially eschew responsibility and eschew accountability, and that's what they've done. | ||
And the representatives have been very successful at insulating themselves from accountability, and it is our job to return accountability to these representatives once again in the And so we've got a Speaker of the House, Tim Moore, who's his own, he's got all of his own scandals. | ||
But what he needs to do is he needs to call a special election, sorry, special session in the legislature. | ||
And him and Phil Berger, our Senate president, need to directly appoint the electors. | ||
By the way, this is, you're looking at a lot of other problems that we have. | ||
I know you're aware of in many of the, several of the other states in the union, okay? | ||
With just high-level questions about the integrity of these elections. | ||
By the way, should South Carolina accept a slate of electors from a state like a Massachusetts or a New York that is literally just riven with alleged fraud there inside of the administration of those elections with those Dominion-style and ES&S-style elections? | ||
Closed source code software run machines which are connected to the internet. | ||
Why should we accept those electors? | ||
We should just flat out reject those electors based merely on the idea that those machines are as they are, as I just described. | ||
No federal delegate and no member of the Electoral College should ever go and accept the results. | ||
From an election from a California or an Illinois or an Oregon or a Washington state. | ||
It just should not happen. | ||
And that's exactly what the framers did when they structured the federal election, the nationwide federal election, which is a collection of 50 elections. | ||
It's so that Rhode Island and New York and Massachusetts and Pennsylvania cannot gang up on South Carolina and North Carolina and Georgia. | ||
That's why we have this. | ||
And look, to... | ||
Kind of continue on the idea of these sort of fraudulent elections. | ||
I'm not the first person to bring up this idea here with this article that you're so kind to share with the audience here. | ||
It's George Bush's attorneys who most recently and most notably made this case before the courts down in Florida in the year 2000 during the Bush v. | ||
Gore hanging Chad A fiasco scenario of an election that happened in the year 2000. | ||
The high-paid, high-powered, no doubt, attorneys for the Bush family were making this very same case that Tallahassee, the legislators in Tallahassee, just merely appoint the electors as they have the power to do. | ||
And of course, the Supreme Court swooped in and said, hey, nothing to see here, and they swept it under the rug. | ||
And said, we'll just take it from here, boys. | ||
And then the people, of course, were therefore deprived of a major potential civics lesson where they could actually learn, hey, how much power do we have here? | ||
Well, we have a lot. | ||
People have a lot of power. | ||
You can go straight to your legislature and demand where your votes go. | ||
It keeps it decentralized and brings the source of power closer to the people rather than being held by the federal government. | ||
And in particular, what is it about North Carolina and the hurricane that makes this an opportunity to revive this authority of the legislature? | ||
I know in the article you say with the devastation caused by Helene, the chances for the administration of a fair election to be carried out in the Tar Heel state are more tenuous than they've ever been. | ||
Adding insult to an already tragic situation, many observers have pointed out the slow response by the Biden-Harris administration led by Mayorkas' DHS, which has proven incompetent in rendering humanitarian aid in Western North Carolina. | ||
You talk about how Trump won North Carolina by a very slim margin. | ||
And on top of that, you got four years of unfettered illegal immigration into Mecklenburg, Guilford, Durham, Forsyth and Wake counties, assisted by Democratic Governor Roy Cooper. | ||
So you've got all these, you know, illegal immigrants coming in, which, you know, whether they're voting or not, having a fair election and and making sure the people voting are supposed to be voting. | ||
That's going to be made more difficult by the disaster situation that's going on there, which is still going on to a very great degree. | ||
The cleanup has not been rapid and things are just back to normal now and everybody go vote. | ||
It's not like that. | ||
So what is it about this situation that makes this opportunity, what makes it an opportunity to exercise the legislature's right to select electors? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, so you've got, as you showed there, just total devastation in those western 25 counties. | |
The ballots were already out in North Carolina. | ||
Early voting had already started. | ||
There is no question That the administration of this election is going to be at question. | ||
And by the way, I'm not the only one saying this. | ||
The reason our news is kind of going so viral on Drudge Report and CNN and WAPO and New York Times, etc., is because the chairman of the Freedom Caucus, Andy Harris, mentioned this last week, last Thursday night. | ||
The Chairman of the United States Freedom Caucus, the U.S. Congress Freedom Caucus there in D.C., said that this plan actually is viable and legitimate. | ||
He did voice a little bit of concern. | ||
He said it could look like a power play. | ||
Well, what is any of government if not a power play? | ||
All of it is a power play. | ||
All of it is the question of who rules over whom. | ||
And so, yes, yeah, it is a little bit of a power play, absolutely. | ||
And guess what? | ||
The American people are tired of having Kamala Harris and Joe Biden and Mayorkas and all of the rest of the total clown car Democrat club who rules over them and says we're going to shove the drag queen story hour in your kids faces. | ||
We are going to arrest people for speech, legitimate speech. | ||
speech. | ||
We are going to put people in prison for being political opponents. | ||
Yes, it is a power play. | ||
It is time for these clowns to put on the dunce cap and go sit in the corner. | ||
It is time for right thinking Americans to sit up, stand up, grab power. | ||
Yes, grab the levers of power and put these morons where they belong, which is in the proverbial timeout corner. | ||
Right. | ||
OK, Harrison. | ||
And so this this this is not novel. | ||
The reason the left is going totally apoplectic, as we've reported, is because they know that this is a legitimate path to power, and they exist to block good, right-thinking Americans from following the path to power and exercising prudent governance over their polity, local, right-thinking Americans from following the path to power and exercising prudent governance over local, state, federal, otherwise. | ||
Right, and of course... | ||
It's always sort of arbitrary where the other side chooses to stand on how much they care about the popular vote. | ||
After all, we know that very sophisticated polls and really there's no contradiction. | ||
85 to 90 percent of Americans want voter ID, but we can't get it. | ||
So the popular will, in some cases, it is the sacred commands of the people and it must be followed. | ||
But in other cases, like voter ID, well, you're just wrong and probably racist, so we're going to ignore what you want. | ||
So people want their elections to be secure. | ||
We can't be provided for that, especially here in North Carolina with disaster. | ||
And I'll tell you, it is the fact that Andy Harris, chairman of the U.S. Freedom Caucus, I don't want to put words in his mouth. | ||
I won't say he co-signed it. | ||
I won't say he endorsed this necessarily. | ||
But the fact that he has pointed to this as being a viable and legal pathway is what really got me interested in this. | ||
Because I'll tell you just honestly, and I'm sure you can recognize how it sounds a little far-fetched. | ||
Like on the face of it, it's like, well, this sounds like maybe something that could get your hopes up. | ||
But the fact that you have the head of the Freedom Caucus in the federal government saying, actually, this is legit and could happen. | ||
And that's why you have the left going apoplectic, as you mentioned. | ||
That gives it a certain legitimacy that is not there at first blush. | ||
What would happen next? | ||
How would this come about and who would have to put things in motion? | ||
Like, what's the next step for bringing this to fruition? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, the cool part about this is, and to go back to your earlier point, it's much easier to run an election in a state legislature. | |
There's just 120 house reps and 40 or 50 or 60 senators, depending on your state. | ||
And so it's real easy to count that tally up. | ||
Well, in North Carolina, guess what? | ||
You have a sizable Republican majority. | ||
And so now let's just have a vote, up or down. | ||
Where do the electors go? | ||
Do they go to Trump or do they go to Kamala? | ||
Or however she says her name this week. | ||
Which way do they go? | ||
Okay? | ||
And you know what's going to happen in North Carolina. | ||
And by the way, so does the leftist media. | ||
That's why they're losing it. | ||
Okay? | ||
And we know what's going to happen in Arizona. | ||
Look, trust me. | ||
Even in Arizona and Georgia, where it's kind of razor thin, those state legislatures are keenly aware of that middle bubble where the middle-of-the-road bubble representative has to basically toe the line with populism. | ||
They're courting independents, and you and I both know that the vast majority of the independents are going the common-sense route with Trump and Vance. | ||
And so in these state legislatures, even the ones where it's razor thin, Georgia, Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin. | ||
Well, how about Wisconsin? | ||
It's a Republican state there. | ||
That is easily going to go to Trump. | ||
And so these reporters all know that. | ||
And so now we've got a short timeline. | ||
We need to get these legislators on the record ASAP about whether they want to do this or not. | ||
We know they're going to have hesitation. | ||
Why? | ||
Well, because for 100 years now, a little more, the state legislators have figured out that they can avoid accountability with the popular vote, have a popular election statewide. | ||
Hey, it's not me. | ||
I don't have to take the vote. | ||
That's their whole job. | ||
They go to Raleigh, and they go to Atlanta, and they go to Phoenix, and they go to Lansing and everywhere else, Harrisburg. | ||
To avoid these votes. | ||
They go to Madison to avoid these votes. | ||
They don't go there to, you know, help pass good bills. | ||
Their whole job is to avoid votes. | ||
Trust me. | ||
And so, look, now, is... | ||
Is there not a voter in the United States now who would rather go back to having the problem of the hanging chad? | ||
Harrison, I think it's really important that we mention that part of the reason that we got here in this situation where we sit in 2024, where we haven't fixed any of the problems that allowed what happened in 2020 to happen. | ||
We haven't fixed any of those problems. | ||
Not only that, we gave the USPS, I'm just going to call them cretins, three and a half, four more years to figure out new ways to perpetrate fraud. | ||
Well, is there not a voter in the United States that would much rather go back to the year 2000 and having a problem of a couple of hanging chads with paper ballots and only paper ballots? | ||
I think just about everybody would sign up for that. | ||
Seems quaint at this point, Noel, the problems that 2000 had. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
Well, please give me those problems every day, all day long. | ||
I'd take them. | ||
Yeah, seriously. | ||
And so, yeah, and the crew just pulled up the headline again. | ||
This is getting mainstream media attention with the likes of Andy Harris seeming to endorse this, saying, hey, this is a possibility and it's something worth looking at. | ||
Is it only because it's this emergency situation with North Carolina? | ||
Is this something that other states would want to get involved in? | ||
I'm just wondering where it goes from here. | ||
And obviously he's not a representative from North Carolina, so it would have to be the legislature of North Carolina. | ||
And look, it's one of the things that I think we need to get back to is... | ||
You know, most people probably don't even know the name of their congressman. | ||
I guarantee you 99.9% of Americans have no idea who their state legislature representative and nobody knows. | ||
That's a bad thing. | ||
Those people make decisions. | ||
They vote on your behalf. | ||
You should know who they are. | ||
And this type of thing is how it used to be. | ||
You would have to know the guy who represented your particular neighborhood in Austin or in Raleigh or wherever the state capital is. | ||
You had to know who they were and what they stood for because they were casting sort of a vote in your stead for the higher offices of federal government. | ||
I think we need to get back to that. | ||
But is it just the emergency situation that makes this possible in North Carolina? | ||
Is this something that could happen everywhere? | ||
Is this something that the Democrats, just to play devil's advocate, could seize upon themselves to try to get state legislatures to go against the will of the populace in places that have been blue for a long time but are looking like they're flipping red this year? | ||
There's a lot of questions there. | ||
In the final minute, sum up what's happening. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, you could argue that the Democrats, this could hurt Republicans. | |
But look, I'll take that fight every day of the week. | ||
Let's go to 37, 38 red states and let's have the legislatures decide, okay? | ||
Because first of all, it's in the Constitution, number one. | ||
Second, yeah, I'll be your huckleberry on that one. | ||
Let's go have those votes in the legislature. | ||
We will win. | ||
They know that. | ||
That's why they're losing their stuff, right? | ||
And so next steps. | ||
Absolutely, there are reasons to do this in all of the other states. | ||
By the way, again, why should South Carolina electors accept electors from Massachusetts, New York, Illinois, wherever, where they have these totally bogus elections? | ||
You're absolutely right. | ||
It's a fascinating strategy, and I really look forward to where this goes. | ||
Follow Noel at Noel Fritch on X. Thank you so much for joining us, sir. | ||
We are now seven days, one week from Election Day, when the fate of America and the world itself will be decided. | ||
We'll be here covering it, God willing. | ||
InfoWars 2024 election coverage begins Monday, November 4th, 2024, at 8 a.m. | ||
Central Time with the American Journal. | ||
We'll continue all through that evening. | ||
And of course, on Tuesday, we will be here. | ||
Come hell or high water, we'll be here. | ||
Just watching them steal it. | ||
We'll probably sit here and watch in real time as they try to steal the election. | ||
I don't know what comes next. | ||
I was talking to my dad yesterday on the phone, and he just kept being like, are you having fun? | ||
Like, this is amazing. | ||
This is the most amazing time. | ||
You're in the most amazing place. | ||
It's all coming down, and I was like, you know, I'm just... | ||
I'm more trepidatious than anything else. | ||
I'm more anxious. | ||
I don't know which way it goes. | ||
I don't necessarily see a positive outcome one way or the other. | ||
I mean, if Kamala Harris is declared the winner, I don't even want to consider that possibility. | ||
It seems so far-fetched. | ||
It seems so unlikely. | ||
All of the rally crowds, I mean... | ||
100,000 people or whatever in New York City for Donald Trump. | ||
Kamala Harris, like riots being caused because she's tricking people into thinking they're going to a Beyonce concert. | ||
I mean, the polls, it seems impossible. | ||
It seems impossible that that is even a possibility, but it obviously is that Kamala Harris could win. | ||
I don't even want to consider that. | ||
I can just see the looks of... | ||
Just befuddlement on faces of Republicans, if that were to be the case, to just disbelief that would wash over us, then I don't know what comes after that. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Now, if Trump wins, obviously that will be cause for celebration. | ||
We'll be extremely relieved and extremely happy. | ||
But we have to realize it is at that moment that we are entering into the most dangerous phase of this contest. | ||
Because clearly the people in power, the people with the ability to do things, are making plans. | ||
They're announcing them in some part. | ||
People like Jamie Raskin, civil war conditions, talking about withholding intelligence from Donald Trump, amongst other things. | ||
Talking about not certifying the election in one way or another. | ||
Chaos will ensue one way or another. | ||
So I'm trepidatious at the same time. | ||
I am thrilled and honored to be where I am. | ||
To be here on InfoWars with you at the beating heart of the resistance. | ||
Striving with everything we've got to tell the truth and inject some amount of sanity into the proceedings. | ||
I'm going to take your phone calls on the topic of the election, really any aspect of it, but let's stick with the election, what you think. | ||
I mean, are you a poll watcher? | ||
Have you seen things? | ||
Is there something that I've missed? | ||
Some insight you might have? | ||
Give us a call. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
We'll go through a few more examples of ways that the Democrats seem to be rigging things in their favor and what you can do to stand up against it. | ||
But let me just say that There are some very bizarre goings on right now. | ||
And we've talked about this many times on this show. | ||
Just sort of game planning or war gaming out the potential paths available to us. | ||
And you've got various forks in the road, right? | ||
The first would obviously be, does Kamala win? | ||
Does Trump win? | ||
Or more accurately, should I say, will Kamala Harris be declared the winner? | ||
Or will Donald Trump win? | ||
And obviously we're going to choose that right path. | ||
We're going to choose the Donald Trump path. | ||
But then it splits into like 10 different paths. | ||
And almost all of them are extremely dangerous. | ||
There are a lot of cards still to be played by the deep state in their hysterical desperation to stop a second Trump presidency. | ||
For one thing, there were apparently, this is being reported by, I believe it was Shadow of Ezra on X. I have not been able to confirm this, like why this was happening. | ||
Mainstream media isn't reporting on it. | ||
There is video. | ||
Clip number one, 12 military helicopters participated last night in an evacuation training exercise near the U.S. Capitol. | ||
Let's go to that video now. | ||
You can see the training exercise taking place. | ||
Helicopters landing on the lawn of the Capitol. | ||
Taking off in a practice evacuation maneuver. | ||
unidentified
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Do you think they know? | |
Pretty troubling. | ||
We also have a cyber warfare exercise taking place in Atlanta on election day. | ||
Very troubling. | ||
And you also have things like this from Unusual Whales on X. So | ||
it appears as though the American economy is sort of teetering on the brink and could at any moment be pushed over the edge to total collapse. | ||
So are they just waiting until Trump is in office to launch this second Great Recession? | ||
That's a card that they could potentially play. | ||
The coup card is a card they could play. | ||
The assassination card is a card they could play. | ||
There are still a lot of opportunities. | ||
For chaos. | ||
And in that eventuality, no matter what happens next, I hope and pray that we are able to, in one way or another, survive the auction in just a few weeks and be on air to cover and provide insight and to coordinate as a central command post. | ||
Whatever Chaos ensues following the election. | ||
InfoWars, we'll do everything we can to be here providing you the information that you've come to rely on us for. | ||
And we, of course, cannot do this without you. | ||
Wouldn't be nothing without you, and it is entirely to the credit of the InfoWars audience that we have not just survived but thrived, changed the world, changed American politics, influenced the consciousness of humanity in such a positive direction. influenced the consciousness of humanity in such a positive direction. | ||
I guarantee you that without Alex Jones and without InfoWars, you would not be hearing about seed oils from the presidential pulpit, right? | ||
You wouldn't have this be a major part of a presidential campaign. | ||
Not saying that, you know, it was all 100% Alex Jones, but like who paved the way for this? | ||
Who has been talking about this for 30 years? | ||
Who has been the spearhead of like every dimension of right-wing politics that has come to the fore recently? | ||
From the Make America Healthy Again, the anti-vax crowd, the The anti-pesticide, anti-fluoride, like all of this is germinated from the seed of Alex Jones and Infowars. | ||
And we thank you so much for your support. | ||
And we ask that if you've never supported us before, now is the time. | ||
There might not be another time. | ||
And if we want to continue into the existence, we humbly beseech you, now is the time to support us. | ||
As we're not going to shut up. | ||
We're not going to give up. | ||
We're not just going to go away. | ||
We have very rough waters ahead. | ||
Here is a brief message from our stalwart commander, Alex Jones. | ||
On the other side, we'll go to your phone calls. | ||
But first, here is Alex Jones. | ||
You know, one of the things that makes you so spectacular, Alex, is long before any of us were here... | ||
You were starting to talk about this deep state. | ||
You were talking about this, you know, a government that was supposed to be of, for, and by the people that was being robbed from us by corporate interests, by special interests, by globalists, long before anybody else ever did. | ||
unidentified
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I will always believe and I will always say in public that Alex Jones is the most extraordinary person I've ever met. | |
I really appreciate Tucker Carlson saying that I'm one of the most interesting, informed people he's ever met, or most, I think he said, astonishing. | ||
But it's not really me that's astonishing. | ||
It's a fact that 95% of what I've covered on the air for 30 years has been from books and publications and white papers written by top globalists themselves and leaks out of Congress, and people like Anthony Sutton that was the archivist for all the secret documents of the U.S. Senate. | ||
I read his books. | ||
Written in the 70s and 80s about America's secret establishment and Wall Street and the rise of Hitler and Wall Street and the rise of the Bolsheviks. | ||
I mean, I interviewed the multiple chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. | ||
I interviewed the head of Air Force Weapons Development. | ||
I talked to all the whistleblowers who found out about the globalist plan in the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s. | ||
So it's not— It's incredible that I know all this information when you learn that the enemy has been admitting all this, and then people don't go to the source documents and think it's astounding whenever I know about it. | ||
So I'm trying to get everybody aware of this information, and now people are more ready for the truth than ever. | ||
Our time has come. | ||
But I can't do it without your help. | ||
InfoWars, as of today, I'm taping this on Monday, can be shut down in just 14 days. | ||
Regardless, we have the alexjonesstore.com, we have our other great sponsors, drjonesnattles.com, that have incredible products, the supplements, all of it. | ||
And if you'll just go get them and see how great they are, you'll be hooked. | ||
But the majority of people never actually go support the broadcast. | ||
Maybe you share the article, stuff like that. | ||
That's great. | ||
But when people call and ask what can they do, we'll fund the tip of the spear while getting great products. | ||
So there's only two days as of today left to enter the sweepstakes for the super awesome Dodge truck and $10,000 cash, $146,000 value. | ||
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I want to thank all you for your support. | ||
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But when you buy a product, you get entered a whole bunch of times. | ||
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The T-shirts, the ball caps, the hoodies, they're all at thealexjohnstore.com, which is our sponsor going forward to be able to have a studio and have the crew and keep operating if we get shut down in just a couple weeks. | ||
And then separately on top of that, if you go to thealexjohnstore.com and sign up for $30 a month, you get $40 to spend in the store. | ||
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And if you're buying the products, you really do save a lot of money by doing it. | ||
And so by being a VIP member, you get $40 each month for the $30 investment. | ||
You can cancel any time. | ||
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It really is one of the best VIP systems anywhere. | ||
Thealexjonesstore.com forward slash VIP. But whatever you do, continue to go to Real Alex Jones on X. Share the articles. | ||
Share the videos. | ||
You're doing a great job at that. | ||
The Great Awakening is here, but we cannot do it without your funding. | ||
And then finally, my dad's great supplement company, drjonesnaturals.com. | ||
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I can't do this without you. | ||
We are doing historic things together. | ||
But please, in such a critical time of this election that you know the left's going to contest and all the craziness happening, we need to stay on the air one way or another. | ||
And I'll never give up, but I could give out without your help. | ||
So visit drjonesdacryls.com today and get some of the great products. | ||
And I thank you for your support and go to thealgyshowstore.com and also get products and be sure and sign up for the VIP program because it's a great deal. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
Now I humbly ask you to take action at drjonesdacryls.com and thealgyshowstore.com. | ||
DRJonesNaturals.com Might I suggest, if you have kids, the Bubblegum Super Blue is fantastic. | ||
My kids love it. | ||
And the toothpaste lasts forever. | ||
You really don't have to use that much. | ||
And you gotta buy toothpaste, right? | ||
Okay, you don't want to buy supplements. | ||
You're not into that. | ||
Fine, you should be because it's healthy and good for you. | ||
And your food is completely denuded of nutrients to an astonishing degree. | ||
So you should be supplementing. | ||
I encourage you to, but... | ||
You buy toothpaste, don't you? | ||
Everybody buys toothpaste. | ||
Everybody brushes their teeth. | ||
Why not just buy it from the good guys? | ||
Why not just that one little change instead of buying it from some big box store for some globalist corporation? | ||
How about just that one little piece of... | ||
Of your budget go to getting this brand rather than that brand, and you actually make a very tangible difference in our ability to continue to prosecute this information war. | ||
So thank you so much for doing that. | ||
And if you have kids, I highly recommend Super Blue Bubble Gum Flavor, drjonesnaturals.com. | ||
With that, we'll go out to your phone calls. | ||
We've got Jay in Georgia. | ||
Jay, I hear you are a poll watcher. | ||
Thank you very much for donating your time and doing this all-important job. | ||
What's it been like, Jay, being a poll watcher in Georgia? | ||
Good morning, Mr. | ||
Smith. | ||
Before we start, I'd like to go back to when you started campaigning for Emperor of America. | ||
I think that Infowars should make a white t-shirt, red letters. | ||
Vote for Harrison because you make all your wildest dreams come true. | ||
So true. | ||
It's so true. | ||
It'll come. | ||
It'll happen. | ||
Actually, okay, to go to the story quickly, I know we're at the end of time. | ||
I'm actually not yet. | ||
I called. | ||
I answered your call the day after you made the call. | ||
I contacted my local elections board. | ||
They said, well, you got to be in Georgia. | ||
You actually have to be endorsed by a candidate or the party. | ||
So then they gave me the number of the Republican, and I contacted that person. | ||
I'm trying to be obscure, and you'll see why in a minute. | ||
Now, this is a small county with a smallish city, you know, capital city. | ||
County seat, right? | ||
And I thought, well, you know, I'll do my part, but, you know, I'm just going to be watching a bunch of little old Southern ladies, you know, counting votes. | ||
No. | ||
She told me that, I told her that, and she said, no, you don't understand. | ||
They stopped trying to steal the big cities so much. | ||
They're going after, they're taking little chunks out of the small cities. | ||
Interesting. | ||
And so I haven't had it, I won't be able, they also have to submit lists. | ||
To the County Board of Elections, the poll watchers, right? | ||
We have to go through a class, and we had all kinds of hoops. | ||
I don't know what it's like in Harris County there in Houston, you know, where you said you could just walk up and do it. | ||
No, it's not like that in Georgia. | ||
Interesting. | ||
So I got on the list for Election Day only. | ||
They had one position left. | ||
But apparently something I told her that the Election Board lady told me Uh, was untoward and she had to make a phone call. | ||
She's like, I can't believe you just told me this. | ||
I didn't know this was happening. | ||
I don't remember what it was, but it was big. | ||
Some kind of little fudgy thing with the poll watchers. | ||
So I'm only going to be able to do it on the day of and possibly I don't know if this little county town is going to take longer than one day to do it, but I'm going to be the last one out the door. | ||
I guarantee you that. | ||
Well, God bless you, Jay, and stick with it, and yeah, you know, jump through the hoops that you need to jump through, because obviously that's all part of the plan, right? | ||
It's why, in Harris County in particular, but all over the country, you have to press a button 75 times to cast a ballot. | ||
Like, they want to just put as much, you know... | ||
As many roadblocks in your way as possible. | ||
If you can take a ballot from 5 minutes to 10 minutes, well, you're doubling the amount of time people are having to stand in line. | ||
You're probably doubling the amount of people who go, I don't have time for this. | ||
I'm going to go home. | ||
My vote's not that important. | ||
And same thing with poll watchers. | ||
If you have to jump through hoops, if you have to make phone calls, just make them. | ||
Just do it. | ||
If you have to, thank you for doing that, Jay. | ||
And that is very interesting to know about the fact that they perhaps maybe feel a little bit too much heat in the big cities since it was the big cities where they did the big steal in 2020. | ||
Maybe now they recognize like, oh, we're not gonna be able to get away with that as easily this time. | ||
So they're going out to the small towns. | ||
I don't doubt that in the slightest. | ||
And we know these big, big money Democrat machines have the ability to very easily find volunteers in small towns or send volunteers from big cities to small towns to carry out their dirty deeds. | ||
their dirty deeds thank you very much for the call and thank you so much for volunteering jay and and actually on that note this is a post by val bianci bianca nielo hope i pronounced that right at lucky val pal on x she says stay in line and vote they arrested me and i didn't break any laws i encouraged people to stay in line and vote because the democrats were discouraging voters from in-person voting today in delaware county | ||
Thank you very much for the call. | ||
And thank you so much for volunteering, Jay. | ||
In fact, the election worker told people in line to go to the Chester Heights satellite office because the line was shorter there. | ||
Do you know what happened when they got to the Chester Heights office to vote in person? | ||
They were told they ran out of MIB applications. | ||
This is voter suppression in Delaware County, Pennsylvania. | ||
I did nothing wrong except encourage people to stay in line and vote. | ||
So they arrested me. | ||
Vote hashtag Trump, hashtag Trump 2024. | ||
So... | ||
Again, we told you that this is part of their plan. | ||
Delay, delay, delay. | ||
Make every ballot take a couple minutes longer. | ||
Put in a couple more choices they have to make, a couple more hoops they have to jump through in the hopes that people get sick of it. | ||
Then you can send them somewhere else. | ||
They go to Chester Heights to vote there because they were told they could. | ||
They're told they can't. | ||
How many people do you think just went, ah, screw it. | ||
I already came all the way over here. | ||
I was in line. | ||
I left in line. | ||
I went over here. | ||
Now they're telling me, I'm just going home. | ||
Screw this. | ||
So don't let them get away with that. | ||
Don't let them get away with that. | ||
Stay in line. | ||
Vote. | ||
And God bless Val Biancaniello at LuckyValPal on X. Let's go to Wild in Wisconsin. | ||
You want to talk about voting up north? | ||
Thanks for calling in, Wild. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
Hey, yeah, I think that we're going to need a miracle here in Wisconsin because I think Madison and Milwaukee are going to use the fraction magic and how they talk about who's counting the votes. | ||
They're going to mess with the votes here unless there's some sort of miracle. | ||
Next door to me, for example, there's a A couple who moved from Texas, and they have just like a ton of Harris signs. | ||
I get called every day, probably like 20 times a day, and people showing up at my door for Harris. | ||
They're like really out in force over here because of the swing state. | ||
And I can imagine like the previous caller is similar in other areas. | ||
You know, so I definitely agree with what you were saying before. | ||
It needs to be kind of too big to rig. | ||
Or they need to get busted in the act, you know, like a cheater. | ||
You know, that's how you always reveal a cheater, like, in a Western or in a relationship, is, like, they get busted back. | ||
They will deny, deny, deny, even when the evidence is right in their face. | ||
You have to actually pull the card out from the sleeve and go, you were cheating. | ||
Yeah, absolutely, 100%. | ||
Everybody has cameras nowadays, and we're at an inflection point in history, as you see with, like, Optimist and these robots, AI, um... | ||
No, that's what it is. | ||
It's like even more than the election day, it's the inflection day. | ||
It is the... | ||
The day that the light enters the prism and which direction it shoots out from, it is the inflection day one week from today. | ||
You're exactly right. | ||
Thank you for the call, Wild. | ||
We have time for at least one more call here. | ||
Let's go to Steve in New York on line four. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
You think they're going to steal it from Trump? | ||
I'd hate to disagree with you, but that's just more reason to vote. | ||
Just remember, just because they're trying to steal it, it doesn't mean you shouldn't vote. | ||
It means you should vote harder and harder. | ||
Well, you can only vote once, but vote that one time as hard as you can. | ||
Go ahead, Steve. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
No, I totally agree. | |
I totally agree, Harrison. | ||
I already voted. | ||
Of course, I voted for Trump. | ||
However, they never fixed 2020. | ||
So with all of the Nevada laws where they're allowed to vote three days after, it's very hard for me to sit here and say, yeah, Trump's going to win, even though he's more popular than ever. | ||
He's up by probably 30 points realistically. | ||
But if you don't fix the original problem in 2020... | ||
Why am I going to sit there on election night and say, all right, Trump's going to win? | ||
And even if Trump does win on election night, you got Jamie Raskin. | ||
Oh, we're going to have civil war conditions, and the only way you can have civil war conditions is if you assassinate Trump. | ||
And if they assassinate Trump, that would ignite civil war conditions, and they might get their agenda. | ||
So for me, I sit here, I look at Trump. | ||
He's very popular. | ||
I love the guy. | ||
However, I just don't see him putting his hand on a Bible on January 20th, 2025, getting sworn in for the president for the second time. | ||
I just don't see it when you don't fix the original problem. | ||
It's kind of like putting your hand and taking the plant out, but you don't go underneath and take the root out so it doesn't grow again. | ||
That's kind of like my favorite analogy here. | ||
That's great. | ||
unidentified
|
And that's how I see this going. | |
We've got to tear the corruption up from the roots. | ||
That's exactly right. | ||
Well, like I said, I mean, we'll see what happens. | ||
But yeah, as I was laying out before, a Trump victory is not not the end of our problems. | ||
It's just the beginning. | ||
It's not the end of our fight. | ||
It is the firing gun. | ||
It is the starting gun. | ||
It is the beachhead. | ||
And that's where we need to really get serious and actually solve the problems that we're talking about. | ||
Giving Trump the backup by, you know, voting down ballot, getting the state legislatures on board, making big moves, seizing power where we can because we know the plan that the globalists have for us and it's total destruction. | ||
Be here on election night. | ||
Election coverage, special election coverage for 2024 begins Monday morning. | ||
And we, of course, will be here tomorrow to bring you any developments. | ||
Stay tuned, Alex Jones. | ||
unidentified
|
While other networks lie to you about what's happening now, Infowars tells you the truth about what's happening next. | |
Infowars.com forward slash go. | ||
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