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Dec. 5, 2024 - American Journal - Harrison Smith
02:38:37
The American Journal: Biden Mulling Pardons For Fauci, Schiff, Liz Cheney & Other Deep State Operatives! - FULL SHOW - 12/05/2024
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chase geiser
16:31
h
harrison smith
01:38:14
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alex jones
01:58
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alex newman
03:01
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alison steinberg
01:10
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dr peter hotez
01:24
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greg reese
03:13
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john mcphee
01:46
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01:54
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00:24
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Speaker Time Text
greg reese
President Trump spoke very highly of Bitcoin this year before the election.
unidentified
If crypto is going to define the future, I want to be mined, minted, and made.
In the USA, it's going to be.
It's not going to be made anywhere else.
And if Bitcoin is going to the moon, as we say, it's going to the moon, I want America to be the nation that leads the way, and that's what's going to happen.
greg reese
Nobody has been able to identify the source of the Bitcoin algorithm.
It was originally published in a white paper on Halloween of 2008. Just as the economy was crashing, Bitcoin was put into practice by its own users who proceeded to get insanely rich and spread the word of cryptocurrency.
But the true origin of cryptocurrency can be found in the early days of Silicon Valley, with the CIA, Mossad, and their pedophile blackmail operations, managing the operation from the start.
In 1997, the NSA published How to Make a Mint, the Cryptography of Anonymous Electronic Cash.
Ripple was formed in 2004 by a member of the INSA and a descendant of one of the most powerful banking families of Europe.
Four years later, in 2008, the banks crash, and the Bitcoin white paper is introduced to the public.
Four years after that, in 2012, Ripple XRP is released to the public, and today it is being considered for its new stablecoin.
Stablecoins, such as Ripple's RLUSD, are digital versions of fiat currencies.
While Bitcoin may arguably be a decentralized currency, stablecoins can be programmed and tracked as easy as any CBDC can.
It's the same thing, just a different name.
And it appears as if this is the direction the Trump administration will be going.
Who needs a central bank when you have BlackRock?
Preparations for a cashless society go back for well over a century.
It was once considered to be the biggest threat in America.
But now, people will be happy enough to just get the men out of the girls' bathroom.
Based on the team surrounding Trump 47 so far, it is clear that nobody in power is resisting the AI world being built around us.
Peter Thiel, who is clearly a proxy of the CIA, has not only pioneered digital money, he is the front man for Palantir, which was funded by the CIA. Palantir is a technology that is now being used in predicting who will commit a crime.
It has access to everyone's private devices and is used by both military and police.
unidentified
Next, our commander wants to disrupt enemy communications.
This will allow ground forces to more safely maneuver and help ensure that enemy equipment stays in position.
AIP automatically identifies and pairs all of the validated enemy communication nodes with a disruption capability.
Assign jammers to each of the validated high priority communications targets.
An electronic warfare specialist initiates the jamming operation.
Initiate jamming operation.
AIP confirms the jamming order has been initiated.
With enemy communication disrupted, our ground forces are cleared to move into position and destroy the enemy equipment.
greg reese
It has also been revealed recently that data harvested from the game Pokemon has been used to train artificial intelligence to achieve spatial intelligence.
unidentified
You can sneak around them or you can get them really close.
Getting closer makes it a bit easier to get those great or excellent throws with your Pokeball, but if you move too fast, the Pokemon are going to get scared and they're going to bolt off.
If you can get close enough without spooking them, expert handler mode kicks in, giving you a small catch rate bonus along with some extra XP and Stardust at the end.
greg reese
So that robots can better navigate in the real world.
Robot security dogs, such as the ones now being used at Mar-a-Lago by the Secret Service.
Robots that are capable of firing rifles.
The world sits on the edge of the AI world, cashless society, and there are no leaders putting on the brakes.
Reporting for InfoWars, this is Greg Reese.
unidentified
It's Thursday, December 5th 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 back and get everybody in the stuff together.
Okay, three, two, one, let's jam.
harrison smith
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.
Welcome to The American Journal.
I'm your host, Harrison Smith.
It's time to live on this Thursday morning.
PeopleWars.com, band.video.
I've got to admit, I slept through my alarm this morning because I stayed up late last night.
I found a really good book.
Somebody suggested this book on X. I kind of can't stop thinking about it, and I couldn't stop reading it last night.
It's called Debunking Howard Zinn, I think.
Let me make sure that's exactly it.
Debunking Howard Zinn, Exposing the Fake History that Turned a Generation Against America by Mary Grabber.
And it's free right now on Audible.
If you have Audible, you can get it for free.
And when I say read, I do mean listen to.
I listened to the book for like three hours yesterday.
It's crazy.
It's crazy.
It lays out just the various stages of demoralization and basically communist infiltration into our society.
It's really astonishing.
I'm pretty convinced Howard Zinn is a literal demon.
I'm pretty sure he's a literal demon.
To be able to tirelessly commit evil, it's almost supernatural, his capability.
It's really wild.
In case you don't know, Howard Zinn is the guy that wrote The People's History of the United States.
It basically laid the groundwork for the New York Times 1619 Project.
The conception of history as commonly held now of being basically just a litany of how evil white people are.
And the whole book starts off with describing Columbus as genocidal by basically completely ignoring all the countervailing evidence.
It's absolutely fascinating.
If you're looking for a history of America being undone from the inside over the last century or so, I suggest checking out Debunking Howard Zinn.
It starts off with sort of his biography, and it sounds like you're reading The Diary of a Demon.
It's wild.
It truly is.
I'm going to try not to just talk about that all day, even though it does tie into pretty much everything else that we're talking about.
We have a lot of news.
We're going to get into some discussion of the assassination that took place last night or yesterday morning, I guess it was.
The shooting death of the CEO of UnitedHealthcare.
I'm getting some different interpretations.
It's all speculation at this point.
And I think in one way or another, like sort of no matter what the truth about this killing is, it represents a watershed moment.
Now, whether that's just America's descent into being a third world nation, You know, I can't help but think back to something like, I don't know, Sandy Hook or something like that, where the first time something like this happens, it's huge news.
The coverage goes on for days.
There's the front page headline, New York Post executed on 54th Street.
I mean, this guy was the CEO of one of the largest, if not the largest insurance company in America.
Huge power this guy has.
I mean, just massively important individual as a CEO of this healthcare company.
Apparently there's a message left on the bullet.
Bullet casings are left on the scene.
We'll get into it.
We'll look into the forensic evidence that we have as well as the citizen journalism that has brought about some pretty interesting information.
But, you know, I can't help but think that It could be pretty quick.
It could be three years from now.
This type of killing will be on the fifth page.
It'll just be a little note.
It'll be like, yes, another CEO was gunned down on the street the other day.
It looked like it was a masked, possibly professional assassin.
Got away on a scooter and never to be seen again.
Sports on page five, right?
I have the feeling that America could get used to this really, really quickly.
That's not a good thing, by the way.
I'm not saying...
It'd be a good thing if CEOs are being assassinated.
I'm saying look at Mexico.
I'm saying look at other countries south of our border.
Like the election season in Mexico, where I think last time it was something like 200-something candidates for office were murdered.
It's just a regular thing.
Daylight.
Assassinations, gunmen rolling up on a scooter, shooting the political opponent or the CEO or the police chief, whoever it is, just shooting them in the head and driving off and they never get found.
Or if they do, it's just some thug that got paid and didn't even know who he was killing.
So maybe this is a watershed moment in that it's the first time and it's shocking and it's unique.
But maybe it'll happen again in six months and then three months after that and then two months after that and then it'll happen like weekly and it'll just be a regular thing and we'll just be a third world country where people just solve their problems by killing each other more so than they do now.
Could be a watershed moment in that regard.
There's some speculation that this was maybe somebody that was on insurance, on this insurance and Maybe got screwed over by them, had some of their coverage denied, something like that.
I know.
I know I've...
I think we've all probably been in a position, increasingly common, of trying to deal with the just totally inhuman mechanical facade of a giant corporation and just becoming incredibly frustrated and thinking, gee, I wonder who their CEO is and how good his security is.
I don't think you're human if you haven't had thoughts like that run through your head.
Is this somebody actually fulfilling those deep, dark desires?
Or is it a professional hit?
Because it seems like it was so brazen and done out in the open so much.
It almost seems to me like a warning or a message.
Like, yeah, we could have shot him in an alley, but we shot him on the sidewalk in broad daylight in front of cameras.
Just so you know, we can get to you whenever.
Who that message is for and who would be sending it, I don't really know.
One thing I do know is if you want to start looking into suspicious murder cases, Big Pharma crops up pretty regularly.
Pretty regularly.
In fact, I want to revisit an old case out of California where there's this crazy case where it was like, this guy's son was like thrown off a balcony, but he survived.
And there was a note that was written that was like, you're next.
And the whole thing was like, oh, but it was just an accident.
He just fell down the stairs.
And then, like, the next day, the kid's nanny hangs herself, but her hands are tied behind her back, and the whole thing is just like, yep, it was a suicide, and it had nothing to do with the kid falling down the stairs, and the note that said you're next.
All of those are unrelated, and it was just a series of bad accidents.
Sorry.
You look into it, and you're like, okay, this guy was, like, the head of a pharmaceutical company.
He was making billion-dollar deals.
You know, maybe it's worth billions of dollars for somebody to put out a hit on somebody.
Point is, when you're talking about things like pharmaceutical companies or the medical industry or insurance, you are talking about people making decisions worth billions of dollars.
If you ever watch true crime, you know people will kill each other over a couple thousand.
You don't think CEOs or executives or intelligence agencies wouldn't do away with an inconvenient barrier to their plans.
If it's worth billions of dollars, I think they would.
So we're going to look into that.
We're going to do some investigation into that assassination yesterday, because I think one way or another, Random shooting, targeted assassination, professional, amateur, whatever.
It represents a watershed moment and the reaction represents a watershed moment as the best and quickest information about this came from totally amateur people on X. I think it was Clint from Liberty Lockdown yesterday who was like, yeah, I didn't understand what Elon Musk meant when he said you are the media.
Now I get it.
Now I get it because it's true, decentralized human intelligence networks just operating independently with access to the tools and technology can do better investigations than, you know, multi-billion dollar mainstream media outlets.
It's all very interesting, all very intriguing.
We'll get into that.
And so much more.
We'll be joined in the second hour in studio by Chase Geiser.
Just been a while since we had him on the show and I thought he'd come on.
Maybe we'll take calls.
Maybe we'll just talk about some of these news stories.
I will be taking your calls throughout the third hour.
And then after the show today, we'll be doing a pre-recorded interview with Cliff High that will be airing on Friday tomorrow.
So very excited to talk to him.
You're going to have to wait.
Maybe we'll upload it.
Maybe we'll upload it after the show today.
Give you a sneak peek on band.video on Infowars.com before we air it live tomorrow morning. Regardless, let's just get into it the way we do every day with your daily dispatch. All right. Here it is, folks. Your daily dispatch for Thursday, the 5th of December 2024. French government falls as Prime Minister Barnier loses confidence vote.
What seemed like a foregone conclusion is now confirmed.
French PM Barnier just lost a no-confidence vote with 331 votes to 288. Forcing his government's resignation and Macron to appoint a new premier.
The debate before the vote was lively with Arendt's, that's the right-wing party in France, Le Pen, blasting Barnier's budget and making it clear he was dead in the water, saying, quote, it's the end of this ephemeral government.
Much of her comments are focused on taxes in Barnier's budget, saying it's all about taxes, taxes and more taxes.
Where's the money?
The French want to know.
So France in total political turmoil right now.
It looks like Le Pen is trying to make hay out of that.
Meanwhile, Syrian rebels capture a key city of Hama in fresh blow to Assad.
Syrian rebels pushing south after capturing Aleppo.
They have staged a rapid advance in the past weeks.
Hama is critical to control of major towns.
Return to civil war risks destabilizing wider region.
The Syrian rebels have continued their march and now captured that slightly more southern city Hama close to the This is from
Postmillennial.
Broke yesterday.
I gotta admit, I'm a little suspicious of this, but it's being reported all over the place, so we can at least entertain the fact it might be true.
Biden White House considers preemptive pardons for Fauci, Liz Cheney, and Adam Schiff.
President Joe Biden's administration is reportedly debating the possibility of issuing preemptive pardons to current and former public officials who could be targeted when President-elect Donald Trump takes office.
No, I didn't realize you could do that.
Preemptive pardons.
Is it a punch card?
Are they tickets?
They have a golden ticket?
Are you giving them a license to kill like 007?
What is a preemptive pardon exactly?
A pardon is when somebody's guilty and then you pardon them.
You say, it's okay.
We're just going to forget this ever happened.
You're telling me that you can just go, hey, you're never going to be allowed to charge these people no matter what crimes they have or will commit.
I mean, this is A little bit bonkers, I have to say.
According to a report by Politico, Biden's senior aides are concerned about officials who could face inquiries or even indictments under a Trump presidency.
These concerns have also been motivated by Trump's announcement that Kash Patel would lead the FBI during his administration.
I bet Trump feels stupid now.
I bet he feels stupid after going through four years of relentless legal attacks, lawfare against him.
He probably wishes he would have known back in 2020. He could have just gone, oh, by the way, I preemptively pardoned myself for everything.
So good luck?
I mean, come on.
There's no way this is how the law is actually supposed to work.
It's insane.
It's also hilarious who they choose.
Liz Cheney, Adam Schiff, and Anthony Fauci.
Of course, as we've been covering this week with the revelation of the final report of the coronavirus pandemic committee in Congress, Anthony Fauci is, in fact, guilty of mass murder.
So it'd be a weird thing to pardon him for crimes against humanity.
We're going to have a Nuremberg 2 trial and your pardons will be nothing.
Meanwhile, Manhunt for UnitedHealth CEO shooting suspect enters second day as Starbucks visit draws scrutiny.
The Manhunt for UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson's alleged assassin continues for a second day on Thursday as the suspected gunman's Starbucks visit draws scrutiny.
The New York City Police Department has released surveillance images of the alleged killer seen in a dark colored jacket, his hood drawn and the lower portion of his face covered while inside an undisclosed Starbucks location.
Thompson was gunned down from behind just after 6.45 a.m.
Wednesday outside the Hilton Hotel in Midtown Manhattan, which was later that day set to host UnitedHealthcare's annual investors conference.
Investigators are also examining a cup recovered from the trash at a Starbucks near the shooting scene.
Looking for touch DNA there.
The video has been released.
You can see the guy get shot.
We will break that down for you, forensically analyze it, as well as show you some analysis from professionals in this field.
And finally, it looks like the hubbub in South Korea has largely calmed down, which is crazy.
South Korean police investigating President Yuk Sul-yul for insurrection.
South Korean police are now investigating the president that declared martial law over insurrection for that declaration of martial law.
Military officials have been questioned by MPs.
It's becoming clear how few knew about the plan, with the vice defense minister saying he learned about it on the news.
And it just goes to show you, if you're going to declare martial law, you've got to stick to it.
You've got to have some stick-to-itiveness.
You gotta not give up after 10 hours.
Because then they're gonna throw you in jail for life for insurrection.
So it just seems crazy to me.
Who declares martial law without like a plan in place?
Without a long-term strategy behind it?
You declare martial law, you reverse it like three hours later, and then they arrest you for insurrection.
Like, what are you doing?
What are you doing?
A lesson.
A lesson there to be learned.
Incredible.
Also, let's just tag this on the Daily Dispatch.
Muhammad is now the top baby name in the UK in the year 2023. Muhammad has become the most popular name for baby boys in England and Wales, surpassing Noah, according to the Office for National Statistics.
The shift marks a continuation of the name's popularity.
Yeah, the name is just so popular.
No, it's just like, you know, it's like how...
You know, when Friends was popular, the name Rachel got popular.
You know, it's kind of like that.
Muhammad, it's just such a popular baby name.
Or it's because the people of Europe are being slow motion genocided by Muslims.
And that actually isn't.
The other twist of this is that there's like five different spellings of Muhammad and the statistics offices always rank them differently.
When if you just...
You know, if you spelled them all the same, they would have been the top name years and years ago.
Because they're conquering the island nation, and there's no sign of slowing down.
Incredible, isn't it?
Horrible.
I mean, it's horrible.
Absolutely horrible.
And symbolic, almost.
Noah being replaced by Muhammad.
Wild.
I want to remind you folks, go to thealexjonesstore.com to support us here at Infowars.
No matter what comes next, no matter what happens on the 9th, four days from now, our next court date, we will continue on one way or another.
And I hope that you can support us in this mission, whether it's under Infowars or some other organization.
TheAlexJonesStore.com is the way to either repair and relaunch this battleship of information or build the escape pod to some newer and better outlet later on.
Meanwhile, I didn't realize this was trending.
This was trending at the top of X. Kyle Rittenhouse revisiting the polarization post-acquittal.
Kyle Rittenhouse acquitted in 2021 for charges related to the shooting of two men during the Kenosha protest remains a polarizing figure.
Recent discussions on social media have revisited his case with posts varying from those who view him as an American hero acting in self-defense to others who label him negatively.
Legal experts had highlighted that his acquittal was based on the self-defense argument and the trial involved extensive video evidence.
And the first I saw of this was Captive Dreamer, Captive Dreamer 7 on X, saying it was extremely unpopular to support Kyle Rittenhouse in 2021. I barely remember any major conservative pundits sticking their necks out to support him.
He says it was me, Mystery Grove, and some friends.
Massive cultural and political shift since then.
Now he's right about the massive cultural and political shift.
What he's wrong about is everything else.
And I went through the archives.
I dug back in.
It wasn't hard because I knew exactly where it was.
To find the video of the War Room episode the day after Kyle Rittenhouse shot those pedophiles.
And I just want to point out...
This guy's saying it was unpopular in 2021 to talk about Kyle Rittenhouse.
It was just me and my friends.
Meanwhile, in reality...
Before 2021, in 2020, on August 26th, 2020, I went on the war room with Owen Troyer.
We broke down the shooting in a second-by-second basis and determined beyond any shadow of a doubt that it was self-defense and Kyle Rittenhouse, or as we kept calling him, Ritterhouse.
We didn't even know his name at that point.
It was 15 hours after the shooting actually took place.
The shooting took place a little bit before midnight.
I watched it live, captured all the videos, went through them with a fine-tooth comb, compiled them, slept about three hours, and then went on the war room and broke it down with Owen in minute detail.
And then we had to wait another year and a half for the trial to happen and for, you know, the glorious not guilty verdict to come through.
I just want to point out, like, even the people that think they're on the cusp, even the people that are like, everybody else was afraid to stick their necks out.
We're over here at Infowars, like our neck, our body, our whole being is out already.
Forget sticking your neck out.
We are out.
We are out the window.
We are out in the danger zone.
We are unafraid to take even the most contentious sides of arguments when we know that we're right because we have evidence right in front of our eyes.
It's funny, this is trending on the top of Twitter.
I thought this would just be a one-off thing, but apparently people have picked this up and are talking about it.
And I think it's not just a time to brag a little bit about being the quickest draw west of the Mississippi.
You literally will not find an outlet that more quickly and accurately identified what happened during the Rittenhouse shooting.
But we'll continue to do that into the future, unhesitatingly telling you the truth, regardless of what the mass media or anybody else wants you to think about it.
I always think back to after Rittenhouse was declared not guilty, and there's people going, yeah, you know, the left and right, they both just decided they were on one side or the other, and they just chose whether guilty or not guilty based on their political leanings.
Like, no, no, 12 hours after the Rittenhouse shooting, we went through second by second proving our side was right.
Don't act like this is a political stance we're taking.
It just has political implications because we're right, and we always are.
unidentified
Welcome back, folks.
harrison smith
This is the American Journal.
Let's talk about this assassination in broad daylight on the streets of Manhattan.
UnitedHealth CEO was shot first in the back and then in the chest.
The video's been released, a security video that caught the whole thing.
The manhunt is underway, has entered its second day.
CEO Brian Thompson's alleged assassin continues for a second day on Thursday as the suspected gunman's Starbucks visit draws scrutiny.
NYPD has released surveillance images of the alleged killer seen in a dark-colored jacket with his hood drawn and lower portion of his face covered while inside an undisclosed Starbucks location.
Thompson was gunned down from behind just after 6.45 a.m.
Wednesday outside the Hilton Hotel in Midtown Manhattan, which was later that day set to host UnitedHealthcare's annual investors conference.
Investigators are also examining a cup recovered from the trash at a Starbucks near the shooting scene.
They're saying this was a premeditated, preplanned, and targeted attack.
I think that's clear just from the video itself.
You can see the guy was waiting.
He was clearly decked out like a professional assassin.
Face covered, awaiting this moment to clearly shoot this particular individual.
I think a lot of people that saw it first had the impression that it was a professional hit.
I had the same.
Although I admit I was a bit confused.
I should have mentioned it yesterday because we broke the news here on the show and talked about the guy using a bike to get away.
Usually with a professional assassination you'd have a getaway driver.
And it's kind of weird to use a bike, especially in New York City.
If you're going to be, like, waiting, like, loitering outside of a hotel waiting for somebody to come in, you're not going to, like, stash a bike in the alley and just think, like, hope it's going to be there after you kill the guy, right?
That's not very professional planning.
I would never fly with the Assassin's Guild, I don't think.
But you also don't want to be fiddling with a bike lock, right?
So I was wondering.
It ran through my mind, but it didn't seem...
It didn't seem possible that it was a city bike, although that did flash through my mind, these bikes that are in electronic bike stands that you can scan with your phone.
Because that seems like another...
I can't even...
I mean, it'd be like a comedy movie.
An assassin running and then opening up the app and trying to scan the QR code to get the bike after you kill a guy.
That didn't really make sense either, but apparently that's what happened.
Apparently it was a city bike that this guy used to escape.
At least that's what witnesses on the scene said happened.
And then an amateur journalist user on X... Apparently, it was already just scraping city bike data constantly.
I don't know if this was for a project or something, and we've got the video of it.
But he basically said, okay, there was one bike that was checked out around this time in this area that went north.
And witnesses said the guy grabbed a city bike and went north, so this must be the bike.
He must have gone here.
So pretty amazing stuff that just hours after this happened and a totally independent vehicle Amateur investigator had apparently found which bike this guy had taken and where he had taken it to.
Some interesting twists in this.
Detectives uncover chilling clue in UnitedHealthcare CEO's murder.
Shell casings found inscribed with message.
Detectives investigating the assassination of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson have discovered a potential motive.
Shell casings at the crime scene were inscribed with the words deny, defend, and depose.
This discovery suggests the murder was a targeted attack possibly linked to UnitedHealthcare's controversial practices.
Thompson, who earned nearly $9.9 million annually, had been with the company since 2004 and served as CEO for over three years.
Thompson 50 was fatally shot on December 4, 2024, yesterday.
Surveillance footage shows this masked gunman waiting for Thompson 50.
Despite an initial jam, the shooter quickly cleared the weapon and resumed firing, showcasing a high level of skill and experience.
It does seem to be proficient in the use of firearms as he was able to clear the malfunctions pretty quickly, NYPD Chief of Detectives Joe Kinney said at the news conference.
After the attack, the gunman fled the scene on an e-bike disappearing into Central Park.
The inscribed shell casings, three live 9mm rounds, and three discharged casings, bearing the words deny, defend, and depose, were found among the evidence collected at the scene.
Thompson's wife, Paulette, disclosed that the family had received threats prior to the incident possibly related to disputes over insurance coverage.
There had been some threats, she told NBC News.
Basically, I don't know, a lack of coverage.
I don't know the details.
I just know they said there were people that had been threatening him.
Here's the video that you're seeing.
Again, the guy, I mean, whether professional or not, acts with a deliberate calmness that is very chilling.
But Drinking Bros podcast had a breakdown of this.
Clip number two, that seems to contradict some of what I just read, especially about the clearing of the gun and whether or not this was a professional hit.
And it seems now as more information comes out and these bullets are found with the word denied, inscribed, which would be right, you denied somebody coverage or something.
And obviously the CEO probably had nothing to do with whatever particular situation this assassin was angry about.
But he was taking out his anger on the person at the top of the company.
Let's go down to clip number two.
This is from the Drinkin' Bros podcast.
And I think it has some pretty good insight into...
Whether this was a professional or amateur and what the goal was, all of that.
It's just a good breakdown in my opinion.
Let's watch.
unidentified
So he shoots him through the calf at 15 feet.
That's not good.
harrison smith
What kind of weapon is he using first?
john mcphee
Yeah, back up a little bit.
So the gun is a very small caliber, suppressed, looks like suppressed pistol.
Most of the.22 ammo is subsonic, meaning it doesn't cross the sound barrier.
But what happens is the ammo doesn't have enough to cycle the weapon, so this guy's gotta cycle the weapon, right?
But you see it jams and he's gotta hit the back of the slide.
A.22 is notorious for not chambering, right?
So he hits the back of the slide so it goes in battery so he can take another shot.
unidentified
So that's one of the things you do before you take a weapon out on an op like that is you fire it a couple times to make sure it's actually tuned up right.
So you don't think this was fired before, then, is what you're saying?
john mcphee
No.
unidentified
No, it doesn't look like it.
john mcphee
The dude shooting has zero experience with this.
unidentified
And he can't fire the weapon very...
I mean, even with.22 at that range, you should be able to pop somebody in the back of the head.
john mcphee
Now, the gun is based off his shoulders, which is the biggest common mistake I see on the range, is the gun will stay 90 degrees from the shoulder, but what you'll see is it's low to the eyes.
So his first shot, when he levels the gun to shoot, watch my hand.
It'll go down.
And this is why his first shot shoots him somewhere in that leg.
unidentified
Now he immediately racks that slide.
john mcphee
Yeah.
unidentified
So he's either an intentional shooter, meaning he shoots a lot and he knows how to perform remedial action, or he expected that to happen.
john mcphee
If he knew anything about the gun, he would have practiced this a couple times.
Now, I don't think this guy's a pro, and I'll tell you why.
If this guy was a pro, just hear me out, I would not have shot from 10 feet away.
I'd have walked up, put it to the base of his skull, shot it, dropped him, walked off with one f***ing shot.
unidentified
If you're getting paid a bunch of money to assassinate somebody, and this is the CEO of the largest private insurance company on earth, he's definitely getting paid to kill this guy, there's no question about that in my opinion, then you make sure the job's done, otherwise you don't get f***ing paid.
john mcphee
If I set this up, here's what I would do.
I would find me someone maybe with a veteran background, maybe not, just someone, a crackhead.
I would hire him for this hit, right?
I'd make sure he had the money, which the money would be a chump change of what he wanted.
I would make sure he had the drugs he needed, and I would pay him in drugs as soon as he was done.
He does this act.
As soon as he's done, I'd make sure he OD'd.
unidentified
Really?
They just push the plunger in, yeah.
john mcphee
Two unrelated crimes, man.
This is how they get away with it all the time.
They pay some f***ing crackhead, and then the crackhead ODs, and no one can ever connect those.
harrison smith
I think that's a pretty good breakdown.
That guy seemed to suggest that this was not a professional hit.
Did they get the pistol wrong?
22. Oh, right.
It was a 9mm.
That's right.
That's right.
It was not a...
But it did have a suppressor, and I saw some speculation that it could have been a 3D printed gun, apparently 3D printed guns.
It's a pretty common problem, how he had to re-rack it.
And a lot of people are speculating, you know, about what this might be.
Again, I think from the...
From the bullets having the word deny written on them, then again, I guess that could be a red herring if you wanted to assassinate some, you know, healthcare.
If you want to assassinate an insurance company CEO and you want to make it look like it was an angry customer, that's what you would do.
In February, Thompson, the man who was killed, Brian Thompson, who was a father, And a married man.
And again, as we speculate, as we look into what may have been behind this, none of this I don't think justifies shooting the guy in the back of the head or in the chest.
But we still have to, you know, we're still wondering what it is that In February, Thompson exercised stock options and sold shares worth $15.1 million less than two weeks before the news of a federal antitrust probe into UnitedHealth became public, a revelation that led to a sharp decline in the company's stock price.
UnitedHealth Group's Chairman Stephan Helmsley, Chief People Officer Aaron McSweeney and Chief Accounting Officer Tom Ruse collectively also sold over $101.5 million in shares.
Helmsley alone reportedly netted nearly $85 million.
Isn't that amazing how that works out?
How people in charge of this massive company learn that there's going to be an antitrust probe into their company, which you would think would be a negative thing, but because they know it's coming and are able to sell their shares before the stock price plummets, The fact that an antitrust probe is launched actually makes them $85 million.
I think that's a little screwy, if you ask me.
These transactions, revealed in a Crain's New York Business expose, are now the subject of an intense DOJ probe into potential violations of insider trading laws.
In addition to the insider trading allegations, Thompson was also accused of attempting to halt UnitedHealthcare's expansion into monopolistic dominance with the healthcare industry, according to Fox News.
Adding to the company's woes, UnitedHealth...
Suffered one of the largest healthcare data breaches in U.S. history earlier this year, compromising the private data of potentially one-third of Americans.
The company paid a $22 million ransom to the hackers and estimated the financial impact of the breach around $705 million, according to the New York Post.
Law enforcement officials are offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to the suspect's arrest.
It appears to be a white male.
His face is covered almost the whole time.
I'd be surprised if they weren't able to get more information out of the Starbucks visit or they caught him on security camera ordering a Starbucks.
No doubt get the sound of his voice.
He may have even used his real name on the cup.
You never know.
Clip number four is an ex-user.
Who was scraping e-bike data from New York City and thinks he found the exact bike that the killer rented and where he went with it.
Let's go now to clip number four.
unidentified
Okay, we're good now.
What just happened?
So there was, unfortunately, a very sad shooting in Manhattan where the UnitedHealthcare CEO was shot.
It seemed like it was targeted.
Very, very terrible.
But then I was watching the news this morning, and the police chief in the news conference said that the assailant fled on a city bike, on an e-bike, which is crazy that a criminal would flee on a bike, especially a city bike.
But I've been scraping city bike data for the past few weeks.
This is not it right here.
This is it right here where, yeah, I can see where every individual bike has been.
So I can see, okay, like this, let's see, like right here, bike number like 216-4382 entered a dock at 2.03 pm and then it exited the dock.
Someone else took the bike at 2.13 pm at station number 1058, which is Columbus Avenue, West 59th Street?
Yeah.
So using all the data, I can see, I checked all the possible rides that the Esalen could have fled on, and there were like only eight rides within the time frame of the shooting.
Only one of them was headed northbound through Central Park, which is the police that the guy went through.
So I'm like really, really confident that this One ride was where the guy ended up, so he ended up on the Upper East Side.
So yeah, I tweeted this, I'm like, oh, this is kind of interesting, and a bunch of people reached out, and the tweet's getting a lot of likes now.
Yeah, why the fuck do you have this data, Riley?
Yeah, that's a good question.
So I like making kind of fun, weird websites that show data in an interesting way.
And I thought it'd be cool to make a site that shows in real time all the city bike rides in New York.
Because this isn't data that you can normally get.
I had to reverse your Lyft app to get this.
So it's data that you really can't get.
dr peter hotez
Wait, what did you do?
unidentified
So in the Lyft app, if I want to go and get a bike, Let's say I click on this doc right here.
I can see that bike437034 is there, and 382600 is there.
This is not public data, but Lyft does give it in the app.
It's not easy to get from their public data APIs, but you can see it in the app.
So I registered this endpoint, and then I set up scripts to go through and check every minute, every doc in New York.
So I was just sitting on the data.
I haven't made the website yet, but I have the data at least, so yeah.
harrison smith
Pretty crazy.
Citibike leaves digital exhaust that could help track a killer.
The police say the gunman who shot an insurance executive peddled away after the crime.
Not a terrible idea in New York City.
If you're killing somebody and trying to get away, bikes would probably be a good way to do it.
CEO of UnitedHealthcare killed an alleged targeted attack in Manhattan, suspect at large.
Again, this from InfoWars.com.
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson has been in a bit of controversy one way or another from Forbes.
alex jones
Thank you.
harrison smith
Brian Thompson, the 50-year-old CEO of the health insurance division of the $550 billion UnitedHealth Group, was killed Wednesday in what police believe was a targeted shooting in Manhattan after his wife said he'd received threats related to his work.
There's a picture of him.
Thompson, who worked for UnitedHealth for almost two decades before he was promoted to CEO of Insurance Unit in 2021, was shot just before 7 a.m.
His wife said that there had been threats related to, quote, lack of coverage, and shell casings found at the scene had the words deny, defend, and depose written on them.
Thompson joined UnitedHealth Group in 2004 and was CEO of UnitedHealthcare's government programs, including Medicare, before becoming CEO of UnitedHealthcare, the nation's largest health insurer.
Thompson graduated from the University of Iowa in 1997.
He has two sons who attend a public high school in Plymouth, Minnesota, and another who recently graduated from the same school.
alex jones
you Thank you.
harrison smith
Seemed like a generally good person from everything that I've been able to read.
He was shot in the chest and rushed to Mount Sinai West in critical condition.
Multiple outlets reported.
Police said the gunman was reportedly waiting outside of the hotel.
And of course there's that $10,000 reward for anybody with information leading to an arrest.
So it's really all we have for now.
The story as it stands I think is reasonable that this was a targeted attack by somebody maybe who had lost a loved one because insurance didn't cover even though he thought they should and decided to take out his frustration on the CEO. Again, like I said in the first segment, I feel like this is a watershed moment one way or another.
In that it just feels like this is the first of what may very well become routine in this country.
Following what Klaus Schwab refers to as the more uncertain and angry world.
Because you understand the almost like number one outcome.
of globalization and technological intervention in our everyday life is just like making people more frustrated and angry and making doing anything less personable or human and it happens just about everywhere even just going to the grocery store and having to do a self-checkout rather than having a person whose job it is to scan all your items like It just seems like with every
advancement in technology, the gap between you and another human gets farther and farther and farther away.
And whether it's trying to figure out your phone bill or your insurance or whatever, we're just increasingly lost in a maze of automated responses and failing AI. I posted the interchange I had with Cash App.
Cash App is like Venmo or something.
It's just an app on your phone where you can send money to people.
And money was being blocked.
From my account, I was trying to use their support system, but it's a chat with an AI bot that was just, it lied.
It just made things up.
Just said things that didn't make any sense.
It contradicted itself.
And then when I was like, what is going on?
I need an answer.
It was just like, and that's all I can do.
I'm done helping you.
Goodbye.
And just stopped.
And luckily, you know, I'm not like desperate for the money.
It's not like something that It's like a life or death situation, but I can imagine being stranded somewhere and needing to get a gallon of gas and sitting on my phone trying to talk to a robot, trying to get the money that's mine that they're not giving me.
It's just like more and more it's going to be this level of frustration that people are going to go crazy.
Yeah, they're going to crack.
People are going to be cracking all over the place.
But also it has to do with the descent of America into the third world nation status.
This is a shocking thing for us.
A CEO of a major insurance company, Fortune 500. Half a trillion dollar company being gunned down the middle of the street.
Not what usually happens in America.
Happens in Mexico.
Happens in Guatemala.
Happens in Sierra Leone.
And it'll start happening more and more here in America.
And of course this will...
Just ignite a feedback loop.
First of all, they're probably going to use this to try to get gun control back on the books.
Because you've got to understand from the CEO's perspective, the average CEO out there that thinks they're separated from the consequences of their decisions, They're probably sitting there going, ooh, gee, I've probably made some decisions that people are probably mad at.
Ah, gee, you know, I preside over a company that have destroyed some people's lives.
Maybe they'll come after me.
I should probably have armed guards.
I should have armed guards, and people who aren't my armed guards shouldn't be allowed to have guns.
Maybe I should put some money into, you know, gun control measures.
Maybe I should lobby for gun control measures and start supporting Democrats who want gun control.
I probably got a lot of enemies out there and I don't want them walking around with guns.
I need the guns to only be in the hands of the people that I pay to protect me.
That'll be the mindset of the CEOs.
And just out of necessity, people will start to do that.
So, you know, CEOs, instead of being able to just walk around freely because this is America and you can walk safely on the sidewalk, like, that'll become less and less true, especially for powerful people.
So they won't be able to go anywhere without being surrounded by a cadre of guys with guns.
And you can just see how this sort of feedback loop will spiral and will Result in just, you know, cartels and assassination as a viable political option.
And it kind of sucks.
We could just not do any of this, if we so choose.
But I thought it looked professional at the beginning.
I don't so much think it looks professional now.
Especially in the fact that the guy went to Starbucks.
That's an amateur move.
I'm not being facetious.
That's just a professional wouldn't do that.
They would not go to Starbucks.
They would know better.
If you're, you know, killing somebody as a professional job, I think you just stand out in the cold for however long it took.
I think it's somebody who is not a criminal, but is engaged on a criminal endeavor.
That type of person is like, is trying to act natural.
Just as like, maybe I'll just go to Starbucks.
That's a normal thing for a human to do, trying to act natural and it may in fact lead to his discovery.
I would be very surprised if this guy gets away.
I mean, there may be 10,000 criminals getting away with things every day in New York City, including the ones who are arrested and then released to commit crimes again that very day.
But this is a CEO. This is somebody with power and influence and money.
They're going to find the guy.
They're going to find the guy.
I can pretty much guarantee it because they could find pretty much any criminal in the United States if they feel like it.
They just don't normally feel like it.
But there will be pressure this time and they'll find the guy.
I have that feeling and I have the feeling that Here's my prediction.
He is a total non-criminal who lost a loved one and blamed the insurance company for denying them coverage that they thought he was due.
I think that's going to be the story at the end of the day.
Because you don't go and kill somebody over just like...
The bill was more than I thought it was.
No, this guy, like, it was like a suicidal action.
He was willing to die just as you're willing to kill.
So I think he knows his wife lost his wife and just didn't want to live anymore and wanted to take out his anger.
unidentified
Alex Newman joins me now to discuss.
alison steinberg
Alex, thanks for being with us.
It's great to have you back.
unidentified
Great to be here.
alex newman
Thank you, Alison.
alison steinberg
So we're seeing the World Economic Forum just saying outright they want to advance cashless societies.
And the way to make it happen is by introducing CBDCs.
I mean, we've been talking about this forever, right?
But do you think this is perhaps going to tie into the Federal Reserve Bank's FedNow digital banking system, which, by the way, is set to launch at the end of this month?
And if so, Alex, explain to us how this is all going to work.
alex newman
Yeah, there's no question that there's a direct tie-in here, Alison.
In fact, Joe Biden's White House put out an executive order last year saying that the administration puts the highest urgency on creating, deploying, and using a central bank digital currency.
And of course, the Federal Reserve has been working on this.
It's all being coordinated by the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland.
They've been working on this for years and years now.
now.
So the FedNow system that's being rolled out at the end of the month, that's one of the major components in the architecture of the CBDCs.
But where this is eventually going, Allison, is they want to completely eliminate cash and have everybody use CBDCs so that everything can be tracked, everything can be controlled.
And as the individual at the Summer Davos put it, these currencies can be programmable so that if you've already exceeded your carbon footprint, say you won't be allowed to buy another stake or buy an airplane ticket or put gasoline in your car or maybe even heat your home, it's It's hard to overstate the danger of this.
I mean, this is the most Orwellian tool for tyranny.
And then when you combine it with the digital IDs, when you combine it with the surveillance, with the artificial intelligence that is now being developed, you realize they're building actually a prison planet and we are the prisoners.
alison steinberg
Yeah, we absolutely are.
It's just so scary.
And I just, I can't even believe this is the world we're living in.
But I'm so grateful that you're speaking out about this and so many others, too, to spread awareness.
But it's so true that the goal here, the total goal is just complete control over every aspect of your life.
You'll never be able to save money and your funds will be turned on and off based on your social credit score, which, as we all know, we're seeing the beginnings of right now.
I mean, isn't the idea of the central bank digital currency hugely unpopular with the majority of Americans?
And if people do resist this, do you think they can still push it through and force CBDCs to be implemented through maybe the destruction of blockchain solutions?
alex newman
Yeah, I mean, to be clear, there is no public support for this at all.
How many people have you heard say, hey, I wish I had a central bank digital currency?
It was a total non-issue for people.
And they've been trying to introduce it for a while, actually.
At the height of the pandemic, Democrats twice added language into the bailout bills that would have made your stimulus payment payable in central bank digital currency issued by the Federal Reserve.
So they've been working on this for a while, completely unpopular idea.
And if people understood the implications, there would be not just no support for it, there would be maybe even an outright revolt.
But what they hope to do is back us into a corner and force us to accept this.
Again, eventually, I think they'll roll this out in parallel with cash.
And after they get the bugs worked out, they'll start demonizing cash more and more.
It's a tool for terrorists.
It's a tool for white supremacists.
It's a tool for tax cheats and drug dealers and pimps and things like this in an effort to kind of stigmatize the use of cash.
And actually, I'm sitting right now in Scandinavia.
All kinds We've had multiple states already, including my home state of Florida, pass laws banning CBDCs.
Right now, the Uniform Law Commission is working on getting every state to pass legislation that would Legislators all across the country who are not going for this.
We saw the governor of South Dakota, Kristi Noem, veto legislation that would have adopted the Uniform Law Commission's recommendations as part of the Uniform Commercial Code.
So a lot can be done to resist this, and we must resist this.
Because again, once the door on this cage shuts, it's not going to be opened again.
We have to stop it.
unidentified
For all our viewers asking where One America News is heading in the future, we would like to introduce you to OAN Live.
harrison smith
All right, folks, that, of course, was our guest Alex Newman yesterday, but he was on OAN there, and I do want to talk about what he's talking about there, the central bank digital currency, digital ID, and what all of that is.
It's predicated on, which is the climate change scam, and now there's an EPA advisor caught on undercover video admitting that there's an insurance policy to funnel billions to climate organizations.
I'm in studio with Chase Geyser.
We'll cover that and so much more in the next hour.
Stay with us.
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen.
Second hour of American Journal is on.
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, joined in studio by Chase Geyser.
unidentified
What's up?
harrison smith
I have a sheet here describing you, Chase.
Chase Geyser hosts Sunday Night Live after the Alex Jones Show on Sundays, and you can find him on X at RealChaseGeyser.
And he, of course, works tirelessly behind the scenes to keep Infowars on the forefront of technological revolutions one after another.
Welcome to the show, sir.
chase geiser
Thanks for having me.
It's always an honor and pleasure to be here.
This is the first...
Spot that I was ever in in the InfoWars Command Center.
harrison smith
There you go.
Returning to it once again.
And yeah, it's been a while since you were on the show and there's so much going on.
I thought I'd just have you on.
We don't have any guests today.
And to talk about some of this big news, what's on your radar today?
chase geiser
Oh, just the new world order.
harrison smith
Yeah, just that.
chase geiser
Just that whole thing.
It's almost hard for me to sit behind the desk.
Because I'm constantly working behind the scenes and worrying about promos on the store and what's going on with the lawsuits and stuff.
And so it's funny to sit down and have to talk to the audience about, oh, here's the news that you care about.
unidentified
Right, right, right.
chase geiser
And I care about it too.
But like all the behind the scenes stuff, like this morning I woke up and I had, I don't know, 14 missed texts.
Yeah.
I woke up at eight and I had to deal with it about, you know, what promos are we doing in the store?
You know, answering questions like that.
And so...
harrison smith
Well, you know, our audience cares about that too.
Can you give us any updates on what's going on with Infowars?
I know our next hearing is on the 9th and we'll know more then.
That's going to be like an evidentiary hearing with like witnesses being called and they're really trying to get to the bottom of like how the whole auction took place and whether it was legit or not.
I imagine that like if they come in and go, look, we did everything by the book.
Here's, you know...
Here's every, we dotted every T and crossed every I and here, you know, here we did it perfectly.
Then I guess on the 9th, the judge could go, wow, yeah, everything looks up to code.
Boom, it goes through.
Or they would do another auction, something like that.
Just tell us like where, what you expect to happen on the 9th.
chase geiser
Well, we've certainly joked about this before privately, Harrison, that the crew gets the same information at the same time as the audience about what's going on.
harrison smith
And that's not a joke.
It's absolutely true.
chase geiser
You know, at 11 a.m.
when Alex Jones takes over, I'm sure we'll know more.
harrison smith
Exactly.
chase geiser
If I had to speculate, and this is pure speculation, my thinking is that if this judge were going to rule against Infowars.
He would have done so already.
Right.
And I think that in order to make sure that his gut is right and to make sure that his final ruling is just, he's ordering these evidentiary hearings so that he can cite all of the reasons why he's not going to give evidence.
That's my guess.
And I have no idea.
I mean, this just shot from the hip speculation.
I just think he could have screwed us already if he was going to.
If he was bought off or paid off or threatened or worried about it, I think he already just could have just signed it over and we'd be the onion.
harrison smith
Had to go through.
chase geiser
Right.
harrison smith
I... I think that's probably true, but I also think you could have the opposite reading with the same set of facts.
You could say, hey, he wants InfoWars to be sold, but he doesn't want there to be any excuse for us to come back and sue and try to reverse it.
So he's like, all right, I want it sold, but I want there not to be any question and no possibility for objection over this.
I still, you know, this whole process has been 50-50 either way and I'm the same with you where people ask me, what do you think?
And I'm just like, I literally have no idea.
I can give you what I want to happen.
I can give you what I expect to happen.
I can give you what I think is going to happen.
But at the end of the day, there's absolutely no way of knowing one way or another.
chase geiser
Well, in the wise words of Jim Morrison, the future is uncertain and the end is always near.
harrison smith
Well, there you go.
And, you know, for us, the end is not always near.
It's actually not even on the horizon because...
And we say this a million times, every single day, either we continue with InfoWars, either the sale does not go through and the good guys get it, and we're able to continue under this flagship, under this brand of InfoWars, continuing on in the future and continuing to change the paradigm over and over, or...
We hop on the escape pod and jet off to newer and brighter horizons.
So, sort of no matter what, we've kind of already won.
I don't want to say it like that, but we're kind of just waiting to find out which way we win.
We win no matter what.
chase geiser
Don't know how.
harrison smith
Yeah, isn't that fun?
Yeah, it is fun.
Into a way, it's that way with the New World Order too.
I mean, the awakening is so rapid now and the awareness is so rapid.
And the amazing thing is that You know, Alex Jones sort of battered down the door to The Awakening a long time ago, and we've been waiting for people to follow us in.
And they have, and yet, and so it's taken a long time, but now there's like, you know, what James O'Keefe does and Project Veritas, even that is sort of a silver lining because I think most of us were...
Pretty upset and confused when, you know, James O'Keefe was kicked out of Project Veritas.
We were like, what the heck?
chase geiser
He got Steve Jobs.
harrison smith
He got Steve Jobs.
Yeah, he got kicked off unfairly.
But now that just means that, like, it's split into two.
And now you've got these two operations going.
You know, this is what we need.
We need independent journalists going out, uncovering stuff, getting undercover video to let us know exactly what's going on.
There's a new undercover video by Project Veritas catching the EPA advisor Brent Efron reporting On Undercover Video, admitting there is a, quote, insurance policy against President Trump, kind of like Russiagate.
This is an insurance policy against Trump winning, saying they're going to give out basically billions of dollars to climate change initiatives, no matter what, if Trump gets in.
Let's go to clip number three and we'll comment on it.
We probably won't play the whole thing.
The whole thing's five minutes.
You can find it on X. EPA advisor admits insurance policy against Trump is funneling billions to climate organizations like they're throwing gold bars off the Titanic.
Let's watch.
unidentified
Now we're just trying to get the money out as fast as possible before they come in and bump them up.
It truly feels like, run a titanic or throwing gold bars off the top patch.
Who are the gold bars going to?
Buffets, states, tribes.
We gave them the money because it was harder.
If it was a government-run program, they could take the money away.
If Trump won, because it was an experienced policy against Trump winning.
Until the Trump people come in and tell us we can't longer give up on it.
I do environmental, climate policy things.
Really?
Yeah.
chase geiser
It's amazing.
harrison smith
That stuff is here?
unidentified
I mean, because I do like federal government climate things.
Well, I have been doing that.
That might change.
chase geiser
Why?
unidentified
It's kind of tough.
So look at the EPA. When I first saw this, I thought it was amazing.
dr peter hotez
So I do, you know the Inflation of Action Act?
unidentified
You heard of it?
Yes.
harrison smith
You hear his voice, yeah.
That's the thing.
unidentified
I work with like Biden appointees.
The money that we've given out, we've given out like billions of dollars. - Pins of billions of dollars.
- You got it.
harrison smith
- Last year, last year we gave out like $60 billion. - We can go ahead and bring it down I mean, you get the idea.
This goes on for five minutes.
It's amazing what people are willing to admit if they think they're going to get laid.
It's...
unidentified
It's disgusting.
harrison smith
It's so easy for the Project Veritas.
They're just like, say that again louder.
They're like holding out the mic on their lapel.
chase geiser
It's like the Wolf of Wall Street when they're on the boat.
Say that one more time.
harrison smith
Yeah, say that one more time.
I mean, it's hilarious how open people are.
You were going to say?
chase geiser
Well, early on in the Biden administration, you would see Joe Biden tweet things from his personal account and his presidential account congratulating and tagging specific people Green energy-related companies.
Like, oh, so congratulations to XYZ Company for their new, I don't know, plug in the Inflation Reduction Act or whatever.
And I would go and I would look up these companies and their board of directors, and then I would copy the board of directors' names.
And paste them in bidenlaptopemails.com to see how many of them had done business with Hunter Biden and Rosemont Seneca.
And it was like every time there was at least one hit where they were connected directly to Rosemont Seneca.
Every time I see EPA or anything environmental related under the Biden administration, it's just no kickback.
harrison smith
Yeah, well, because there's so many things.
Even just in that short little clip that we saw, it's the mass looting.
You're talking about throwing gold bars off the Titanic.
It's more like...
You know, robbing the bank vault as the bank is burning around you, right?
They're looting as much money as they possibly can.
There's the aspect of Trump proofing.
That's what we've been talking about, you know, ever since Trump got elected and even before this idea that government agencies are all just trying to put things in place to survive for the next four years.
So the Ukraine funding, they're signing agreements, five years of funding because they know that Trump's going to want to cut it.
And so they want to put in contracts and things to not allow him to do that.
Of course, I think he can do a lot of that anyway.
Just the understanding that Trump is going to cut all of this wasteful spending, tens of billions of dollars.
That guy quoted $50 billion, which...
Just mind-boggling amounts of money.
You throw around these numbers, tens of billions.
If you can create a $1 billion industry, you're world famous.
It's incredible if you can generate a billion dollars a year.
These people just rob $50 billion a year.
chase geiser
Like it's nothing.
harrison smith
And just hand it out.
chase geiser
Blinking bragging and tweets of sending another $750 million to Ukraine and things like that.
harrison smith
Like it's nothing.
chase geiser
It's ridiculous.
And you asked me earlier today what's been on my mind And I immediately went to the Infowars behind the scenes stuff.
But in terms of global political news, what I'm very concerned about right now are the rhinos.
And rhinos probably...
unidentified
The rats.
harrison smith
We call them the rats now.
chase geiser
The rats, yeah.
It's a misnomer because I think the Republicans in name only are actually what the Republican Party always was.
harrison smith
Right.
chase geiser
Now it's MAGA coming in and there's this schism and then you have the rats and the MAGA, right?
harrison smith
Yes.
chase geiser
And that's what I'm concerned about.
I'm concerned about the Lindsey Grahams and the Kinzangers and people like that who are coming out against Trump.
Even though Lindsey Graham publicly supports Trump, things like expressing doubt about Hague's test placement because of rumors that he might have had alcohol on the job, it's so ridiculous to me.
harrison smith
Hilarious.
chase geiser
Especially since we celebrate Churchill so much and we know that guy was toasted like the whole entire war.
harrison smith
You know, somebody was posting the, it was George Washington's farewell party.
There were 55 attendees and it was like 64 bottles of claret, 94 bottles of wine, 58 bottles of champagne.
It's like, you know, drinking has a long and storied history in our country.
chase geiser
What was the bar tab the day they signed the Declaration of Independence?
It's one of my favorite stories from my history.
It was like, adjusted for inflation, it was thousands upon thousands upon thousands upon thousands of dollars.
harrison smith
Because they knew how to have a good time.
But look, you know, whatever.
Not defending a guy drinking on the job.
But who cares?
Who cares?
And it's a total rumor.
And it's amazing how these people can go through their whole lives without scandal until the moment they're about to be put in a position of power and suddenly it's sex scandals and drinking scandals and rumors and they're fired.
And it's like it's so obvious how this is pure blackmail and how people they just they want to shut this down and they just need an excuse and they come up with whatever's available for whoever it is.
chase geiser
Yeah, well, and you can throw a rock and hit a white guy that's been falsely accused of sexual assault.
Thing is, when it's a Republican, it's a scandal, and when it's a Democrat, it's just ignored.
I mean, there's so many claims against Bill Clinton and Joe Biden and Hunter Biden and others, totally disregarded by the mainstream media.
Oh, we haven't seen that diary yet.
We haven't looked at that diary.
We're not sure if that diary's true.
That was the narrative there.
And then there's an anonymous source to NBC talking about Higgseth.
First of all, Higgseth worked for Fox, right?
harrison smith
Right.
chase geiser
So you have NBC reporting on someone who worked for their competitor, already immediately a conflict of interest.
harrison smith
An anonymous, unnamed source.
chase geiser
An anonymous, unnamed source for an administration that hates NBC and the mainstream media for a population, the supporters, the MAGA Republicans who hate the mainstream media.
I mean, there's so many different conflicts of interest here.
Why would we believe in anything that they ever say?
harrison smith
Yeah.
And, and, you know, I believe people like Brianna Morello, who worked with Hegseth at Fox and she wrote sort of an open, an open letter saying, Hey, you've got these unnamed people.
Well, I'm named, and Dan Bongino's named, and there's all these people that worked with Hegseth that are like, we'll go on the record and tell you we never saw anything like this.
So it's completely arbitrary.
in any honest system, the unnamed, unverified, you know, fraudulent, scandalous rumor would never, you know, be believed over the people out there with their names on the record saying, no, this didn't happen.
But it's not about what's true.
It's about what's convenient.
And they just don't want Hegseth.
chase geiser
Absolutely.
Well, and it makes sense why they don't want him because everything that he said makes total sense and it seems like he knows exactly what to do and what should be done.
harrison smith
So keep him out of power at all costs.
God, it's just awful.
It's just so...
So stupid.
And, you know, I get frustrated how people blame Trump for this because I see that a lot, too, where it's like, oh, gee, it's, you know, it's happening again.
chase geiser
Yeah, he should have added him himself.
harrison smith
Yeah, Trump is, you know, failing again.
It's like, no, Trump tried to get Gates.
Trump is trying to get Hegseth.
Trump is trying to get good people.
It's these rhino, these rats, these holdovers, the remnants.
You call them the remnants because it's like, Their time is over.
The time has passed.
The old Republican way of losing with dignity is just not what anybody's satisfied with anymore.
But there's still people just clinging on, just hanging on, you know, by their nails.
Susan Collins and Susan Rakowski.
chase geiser
Because he resigned his congressional seat, right?
So he got doubly screwed.
Not only did he not get the nomination, but now he's no longer going to be a congressman.
Do you think that's part of a plan for him to run for governor or something?
I don't understand why he would have resigned from Congress immediately before the nomination was confirmed.
It seems like there's something going on there that isn't really explicitly stated.
harrison smith
I think you're right.
I think there absolutely is something.
I don't know...
What it is exactly.
It could have just been a trick.
I don't know.
Just pretend like you're going to have him on just to get him out of Congress.
I don't even know why.
Why do you resign Congress before you're put in the position?
Like, that doesn't make any sense to me either.
To show that you're serious about it, I guess, but...
But then, you know, it doesn't go through and you're out on your butt.
It really doesn't make any sense.
chase geiser
Right.
And I think they have a special election in Florida to fill the seat.
I think that's how that works in Florida.
So I think on January 25th, there's going to be a new Congress member that takes the seat, depending on how the special election goes.
harrison smith
That's so weird.
But of course, Ron DeSantis is...
Been slated or been talked about as replacing Hegseth if Hegseth's appointment doesn't go through.
So, you know, maybe running for governor of Florida would be Gates' next play.
We actually have a video of this.
Clip number five is Senator John Cornyn refusing to back Pete Hegseth.
Now, the report is, and like the official announcement was like, every single senator is on board.
Hegseth, there's no dissension.
All the Republicans are on board.
But then John Cornyn's asked about it and he refuses to back.
Give a positive answer.
Let's go now to clip number five.
unidentified
Did you discuss Pete Hegseth with Bondi?
Pardon me?
Did you discuss Pete Hegseth with Bondi?
No.
Are you comfortable that he is the right man for the job, Hegseth?
I'm going to let the process work itself out.
I've known Pete for a number of years, and so I haven't had a chance to talk to him since he was nominated, but we'll let the process work itself out.
Let the process work itself out.
harrison smith
Yeah, total avoiding the Russian Senate.
I know, that's what I'm saying.
John Cornyn?
I'm coming for you.
I'm coming for you, John Gornan.
And somebody was saying, you know, about Pete Hegseth.
They're like, you know, Pete Hegseth is really not that good.
Like, you know, he's got some issues that, you know, you wouldn't be down with.
And it's like, it's not about Hegseth.
It's about the principle.
It's about these rats.
It's about these holdovers that still retain institutional power and are seemingly like narcissistically desperate to assert it, even if it It hurts them or hurts their side or hurts their agenda.
They, like, can't help themselves.
The John Corns of the world, the Mitch McConnells of the world, just have this need to use their institutional power, even when it's in total opposition to their stated, you know, goals and beliefs.
chase geiser
And the fact that they had the audacity to accuse Trump of appointing him or nominating him simply because he was a Fox host, regardless of the fact that it was very obvious the reason Trump appointed him is because, A, he's got good ideas, and B, he's actually been in war.
harrison smith
Right.
chase geiser
It had nothing to do with him being a Fox host.
harrison smith
Right.
chase geiser
It's just incredibly troubling and insulting to be there.
Always insulting our intelligence.
harrison smith
Yeah, and it's just this, I don't know what it is, this institutional power they still grasp onto and hold onto and won't let go of.
Did you see this video, Peter Hotez?
This is crazy.
Somebody from Infowars posted it and was just like, hey, this guy needs to be arrested right now.
This guy is literally announcing...
chase geiser
We got Zika, we got bubonic, we got all the viruses that are going to be launched on the 21st.
harrison smith
Let's go to this video in case people haven't watched it.
Clip number nine.
Vaccine researcher Peter Hotez says multiple viruses will be unleashed on America the day after Trump takes office.
Let's watch.
dr peter hotez
Here's the reason why we need to care about this stuff.
Nicole, is that we have some big picture stuff coming down the pike starting on January 21st.
Mr. Bloomberg mentioned H5N1. That I'm really worried about.
It's all over wild birds on the western part of the United States and going up in the north.
It's getting into the poultry.
We're seeing sporadic human cases.
No human-to-human transmission yet, but that could happen.
It's in the cattle.
It's in the milk.
And that's just the beginning.
We have another major coronavirus likely brewing in Asia.
We've had SARS in 2002, SARS-2, COVID-19 in 2019. And we know these viruses are jumping from bats to people thousands of times a year.
But there's still more.
We know that we have a big problem with mosquito-transmitted viruses all along the Gulf Coast, where I am here in Texas.
So we're expecting dengue and possibly Zika virus coming back, or Apuche virus, maybe even yellow fever.
And there's more.
unidentified
Then we have all the sharp lines and dice and preventable...
dr peter hotez
Disease is going up because of, in part, the anti-vaccine activism.
harrison smith
Oh, it's the anti-vaccine activism.
dr peter hotez
That's what's causing it.
Pertussis cases, whooping cough over the last year, 15 measles outbreaks this year.
We've got polio that's been in the wastewater in New York State.
All that's going to come crashing down on January 21st.
harrison smith
All of that's going to come crashing down on January 21st.
dr peter hotez
To be able to handle this.
harrison smith
Like you said, so many things about this.
First of all, every disease he's talking about that has been eradicated in the Western world for the last 50 years, it's now coming back because of anti-vaccine activism, 100% illegal migrants.
The illegal migrants are coming from places that do not have the healthcare system that the West does.
They're bringing in tuberculosis.
They're bringing in measles.
They're bringing in all of this stuff.
They don't exist.
In America.
And like, even, you know, we have young kids.
I have a young kid.
You go to the doctor and it's like, well, do I really need a pertussis?
Like, who even has that?
Like, is my kid ever going to get it?
And the doctor will sit there and go, well, you know, the illegal immigrant, you know, the migrant population does.
So if they go to school with somebody who maybe has a nanny that's illegal, you know, brought it over, then they could be exposed.
So American kids wouldn't need these vaccines except that they're literally importing the diseases that have been eradicated in this country.
chase geiser
You have to report if you're taking fruit across the border, but you can be an illegal human being just wandering across.
And the crazy thing is when I was in Eagle Pass, literally on the border, you would see just dozens upon dozens of packets of antibiotics laying on the ground.
It was really weird, something I never would have anticipated.
I'd pick them up, and they were written in Spanish, and I'd Google it and look it up, and oh, this is an antibiotic for this disease, and this is an antibiotic for that.
And it's like these people are sick, popping antibiotics and swimming over the Rio Grande and freezing cold water and coming into the United States.
And they're immediately taking off all of their wet clothes, opening up a trash bag, putting on the dry clothes from the trash bag, and then leaving the trash bag.
So they're littering, they're sick, they're dropping off drugs just all over the ground, and they're just going to some NGO like Border Hope or something.
Right.
harrison smith
Well, and then they go to, you know, hospitals like in Denver where they've, you know, illegal immigrants have costed $50 million and the hospital will close down if you don't have, you know, an injection of cash from the federal government.
So it's just problem upon problem.
But I mean, that's just that's barely scratching the surface of what Peter Hotez said right there.
Because isn't it interesting, isn't it fascinating, Chase, how for a hundred years there's no emergent, novel, unknown virus, then COVID-19 hits and suddenly there's like six.
Suddenly it's Zika and dengue and this new bird flu that's suddenly spreading and all these, you know, mosquito-transmitted diseases that just popped up out of nowhere.
It's like, isn't that...
Isn't that interesting?
For a hundred years, there's nothing, and then all of a sudden, in five years, there's like 19 different diseases cropping up out of nowhere?
chase geiser
Wouldn't you rather die of any of those diseases than live under tyranny?
unidentified
You know, that's an interesting choice.
harrison smith
Whatever.
Yeah, why not?
Alright, we'll be back on the other side.
We're going to take a commercial break here in just a minute.
But Chase, you're the expert.
What do people buy at thealexjonesstore.com?
What's on sale right now?
chase geiser
Well, we have site-wide discounts going on right now.
I highly recommend any of the fundraiser t-shirts.
They're usually $50.
Right now, they're $42.99, I believe.
And they really help Alex because we get a better percentage of the profit on those sales.
Obviously, the Alex Jones VIP Club is the most important, most powerful way that you can support Alex and ensure that Regardless of what happens to InfoWars, we stay on the air.
You pay $30 a month.
You can cancel anytime.
You get $40 in store credit.
Launching things like ornaments.
We've got amazing Christmas sweaters right now.
Awesome stocking stuffers like the coin are amazing.
The posters are a great gift as well.
I mean, we have new products every single day.
All the deals are amazing.
We've got a deal right now that ends on Friday.
Actually, technically, it ends on Saturday at 3 a.m., where you can get any combination of three shirts or hats for $60.
And if you add two hoodies, it's only $80.
A tremendous amount of savings there.
So I highly recommend that you check out the AlexJonesStore.com right now, not just because the supplements are amazing and the products are amazing, but also because it's fighting for freedom of speech, liberty, and this network.
harrison smith
Yeah, I think the best part about the VIP club is you get the access to the Lost Alex Jones tapes.
It's the only place on the internet that it's available.
The Alex Jones Show from 2001 to 2008, just a treasure trove of information.
chase geiser
40,000 segments.
harrison smith
40,000 segments.
And it comes with your VIP club as well as you get a free gift.
If you order during Cyber Week, they put in something worth $30 to $50.
So go now to thealexjonesstore.com slash VIP. Sign up.
See all the perks.
We'll be back on the other side to break down more of today's news.
unidentified
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen.
harrison smith
This is the American Journal.
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, joined in studio by Chase Geiser.
I got so many stories just from today.
I mean, just story after stack upon stack of incredible stories, most of them about the U.S. government.
Is there anything else you want to say about this Peter Hotez clip?
I mean, he seems genuinely excited about not just that it's going to happen at some point in Trump's administration, but on January 21st.
Everything from bird flu to a new coronavirus to SARS to mosquito transmitted viruses, dengue, Zika, yellow fever, pertussis, measles, polio.
It's all coming down.
It's all the anti-vaxxers fault.
Ignore the fact that these diseases have been eradicated in America for 50 years and are only making a resurgence because of illegal migrant populations.
What do we do with people like this?
chase geiser
Well, first of all, never trust a man who works in an office with fluorescent lights on.
harrison smith
Interesting.
chase geiser
I just, I can't imagine sitting in a room like that with those overhead lights on.
I mean, you know, the office that we have.
harrison smith
We have very sensual mood lighting.
chase geiser
But I just can't take it.
I don't know if it's because of the ADD or whatever, but those lights to me are like, it's like Chinese water torture.
First of all, there's something sociopathic about that.
The second thing is, the reason that doctors and academics traditionally wear bow ties, as I understand it, is because they don't get in the way if you're working on something like machinery, if you're an engineer, or if you're actually performing surgeries, like doctors used to wear bow ties so they could roll up their sleeves and operate and check on people so that their clothes wouldn't get in the way.
Sitting there with the laser on and they still get the boats.
It's like an old Ayn Rand thing.
Ayn Rand used to write about architecture.
And she said that one of the things that was so stupid about modern architecture is that just for the sake of posterity, we keep designs that are no longer functionally relevant.
So originally, you'd have Corinthian and Ionic and Doric columns because it was ugly where the column met whatever it was supporting.
And so you'd put this design to cover up that seam and just make it look pretty.
Now, our buildings aren't even designed with the same technology that they used to, but we still just slap Corinthian columns on stuff, even though it has no functional reason whatsoever.
harrison smith
See, I'm going to disagree with you, because I've got a big problem with functionality taking the preeminent position in architecture's considerations, but I get your point that it's...
You should start wearing a bow tie.
Maybe I will.
But I get your point that it's...
Holding on to the appearance of something that once had a functionality because he's sort of playing a part.
chase geiser
Exactly.
That's what I'm trying to say.
And I think he couldn't even express it any better than that.
He is somebody who is fitting into a mold.
He's playing a role that he believes is prescribed to him by the industry that he's in, whether it's academia or whether it's healthcare in general.
And that just renders all credibility totally vacant, I think, in anything he has to say.
harrison smith
Well, and let's just remember that he made this statement two days after the release of the final report of the Committee on Coronavirus that said with congressional authority it came from a lab, or at least that it most likely came from a lab, but yes, it came from a lab, as well as, you know, vaccines didn't work, the lockdowns were terrible.
chase geiser
And his daughter's autistic, I believe.
harrison smith
Oh, really?
chase geiser
Yeah, I think in that last image that you showed, that book might be about his daughter where it says vaccines didn't cause Rachel's autism.
harrison smith
Interesting.
chase geiser
I'm not sure, that's just my speculation.
harrison smith
And that could just be a denial.
But, like, what does it take for these people to be humbled?
Like, they have been proven wrong Over and over again, and yet they just go out and say the same thing with the same appearance and facade of authority, even though they've been wrong over and over, and they never even acknowledge it.
And even now, he's talking about there's new coronaviruses cropping up in China.
It's like the congressional report came out two days ago saying that it came from a lab, but you're sitting here going, these things are passed to humans from bats a thousand times a year.
chase geiser
Right, because people are hanging out with bats all the time.
harrison smith
Oh yeah, exactly.
chase geiser
All the time.
harrison smith
Have you ever met a bat?
They're so cuddly.
chase geiser
Everybody in Wuhan is named Bruce Wayne.
harrison smith
That's right.
chase geiser
It's like going to Iran.
Oh, hi, Muhammad.
Yeah, you go to Wuhan, it's just, hey, Bruce.
harrison smith
They're all Batman, yeah.
But it's just absurd.
Like, what is it going to take for these people?
I mean, and I'm asking facetiously, obviously, they're never going to admit themselves that they were wrong.
But we know that they're wrong.
And, like, this is the frustrating part.
If you read that congressional article, Was it bipartisan?
I don't know.
I know it was led by Republicans, but they're not uncertain about their conclusions, and their conclusions are carefully worded to seem sort of benign, but if you really think about what it is, it's mass murder, mass psychological trauma implemented on the American people with no Justifiable cause so like what is it so again time and time again we're doing this show and it feels like we're just reporting on a mass murderer on a serial killer and
we know his name and we know where he lives and we know his mo and we know the killings that he's done we know the killings that he's planning on doing and we just reporting on it we're just going well you know Jeff Smith did it again.
He killed again.
There he is, killing on video.
It's like we have all of the evidence we need.
When do we get to the prosecution phase of this demand of justice?
I really need to know.
chase geiser
Well...
It's a difficult question to answer because my intuition, my gut answer, my emotional, impulsive response is illegal for me to express.
And I'm not trying to be silly.
And it's not actually the correct response.
My impulse of what I would want to do is not right.
I actually do believe in the cliche that the best revenge is success.
And I think all we really need to do is render them powerless.
Like, okay, you believe this.
You've been pushing this.
Nobody agrees with you anymore.
You have no authority.
Nobody's listening to you anymore.
You don't have any placements on cabinets or on boards or in panels.
You can talk all you want on CNN or MSNBC. Nobody watches it anyway.
So, fine, whatever.
I think we just need to move on and ignore these people who are just screaming from the desert.
harrison smith
That's true for the people that are screaming, for the people that actually were involved.
chase geiser
Oh, the Fauci needs to go to prison.
harrison smith
Fauci, yeah, yeah.
chase geiser
100%.
harrison smith
Yeah, because I agree.
chase geiser
Just some loon with a bow tie, an autistic kid, like, whatever.
harrison smith
Just disenfranchise and just ignore him, deprive him of power, and it's happening naturally.
Yeah, you know, I would love, we played the video yesterday of Dan Goldman on CNN, and they play a video of Dan Goldman From a few months ago saying, Joe Biden will never pardon Hunter Biden.
That'll never happen.
It would be a travesty and just I guarantee it'll never happen.
chase geiser
Everybody knew that was coming.
harrison smith
Right.
Well, they play that video and then they have Dan Goldman.
They go, how does that make you feel?
You know, they weren't saying, what do you think?
chase geiser
And then he tried to dodge it, right?
By saying, oh, well, you know, if the hearing had gone, if the plea deal had gone through and they're like, no, your original video was after the plea deal.
unidentified
Yeah.
harrison smith
I would love to see that type of thing where they bring it up and they go, well, here's what the congressional thing said.
They said that not only did it come from the lab, you knew it came from the lab and you covered it up.
Why did you do that?
Like, just stick it to them, put them in that uncomfortable situation.
And, you know, maybe just our success, Infowars' success, the right-wing success, the non-mainstream media success is forcing the mainstream media to maybe do what they should have been doing the whole time, which is, you know, holding these people's feet to the fire and asking them the difficult questions.
chase geiser
There's some of that.
We see that one fall over.
Sure, Cuomo's kind of pivoted back into some semblance of journalism.
But ultimately, when push comes to shove, guys, more people watch CNN clips that get covered on Infowars than actually watch the original CNN clip.
harrison smith
Wow, that is extreme.
I mean, MSNBC even more so.
38,000 people at their peak.
chase geiser
Hallmark just passed them, I think.
More people watch Hallmark.
harrison smith
I guarantee you more people are watching us right now.
I can guarantee you.
And this isn't prime time.
This isn't, you know, drive time radio.
I mean, so we're reaching far, far more people than even MSNBC, but there's still this hanging on of...
chase geiser
CNN has like 4,000 employees.
harrison smith
Really?
chase geiser
And I'm like, how do they do it?
How?
Nobody watches.
harrison smith
My God, they don't even have a cool online store.
It's insane how...
How badly we're beating them.
It really is fun.
But what about this?
And this is just sort of in line with what we're talking about.
I don't even know what to make of this.
I don't know if this is possible.
It's just a rumor, but it's being reported everywhere, Politico and everywhere else.
Gateway Punna has this story.
Biden regime reportedly considering preemptive pardons for several of Trump's enemies, including Liz Cheney, Adam Schiff and Anthony Fauci.
Can you even do this, Chase?
I wasn't aware of such a thing as a preemptive pardon.
I don't think that makes any sense, actually.
chase geiser
Well, I think you can be pardoned before you've been charged, but I don't think you can be pardoned for crimes that you have yet to commit.
So I can't pardon you for the murder you're going to do next week.
But any crime that you've committed, regardless of whether it's been investigated or you've been charged, I think you can pardon it.
Listen, I've got a problem with Joe Biden.
He's obviously abundantly corrupt.
Obviously, Hunter Biden should have faced justice in a big way.
Joe as well, Fauci, all these others.
But I do...
I fundamentally believe in the presidential power of pardoning, and I'm willing to take these punches of the pardons I disagree with if it allows for Donald Trump then to come in and pardon January 6th defendants and things of that nature.
I'd rather see guilty people get away with it than innocent people go to prison.
There's a, was it Jefferson that said, or Benjamin Franklin, I can't remember, I'd rather see a hundred, whatever.
It's an old principle that you'd rather see guilty people get away with a crime than innocent people be wrongly convicted for one.
Yes, it's unfortunate.
It's uncomfortable.
I think there should be justice in some way.
Hopefully we can still hold these people accountable at the state level because the presidential pardons only apply to federal crimes or in civil court.
You know, there's still vulnerabilities there.
But I think that the right to pardon for the president is really sacred, and I'm not going to challenge that.
harrison smith
I agree.
And if I was Joe Biden, I would have pardoned Hunter Biden because I think loyalty to your family is not something...
chase geiser
Blood runs thicker than water.
harrison smith
Yeah, of course you're going to do that.
It's like when Ted Cruz went to Cabo or whatever during the freeze in Texas.
It's like, you don't think we all wanted to be in Cabo?
You all would have gotten on that plane if you had a chance.
Don't blame somebody for doing something that is just...
Obviously good and doesn't really hurt anybody.
And the thing is, they went after Hunter Biden on gun charges and tax evasion.
And it's like, these are the two most BS charges you could possibly charge him with.
We wanted to see him charged for treason or human trafficking or any of the other myriad ridiculous crimes that he has proven to have committed from his own words, from his laptop and the evidence therein.
So when they say, well, this was a political...
Because in the statement of the pardon, he was saying like, you know, most people who lie on a gun charge, it might be a slap on the wrist, maybe a fine at the worst, but nobody goes to jail for this.
And nobody goes to jail for tax evasion when they pay it.
chase geiser
Yeah, but they weren't targeting disproportionately for those crimes.
Those were the points of vulnerability where they could open up a can of worms to find all this stuff.
If you're going to investigate somebody for tax evasion, then you're going to figure out where they made and how they made all their money.
unidentified
That's right.
harrison smith
That's true.
chase geiser
I mean, it was a major can of worms there that I think that's the main reason that Joe Biden wanted to just kind of nip it in the bud because it was going to lead down a road that was not going to make him look very good.
harrison smith
That's true.
But the way that they charged Hunter, like, I think was maybe designed to give him this out where they go, you know, we're going to sort of overcharge him with these sort of basic levels.
So then when you go back and pardon him, you know, you'll be able to make the case.
chase geiser
And then they said it was because he has a book coming out that's going to expose all.
And I'm thinking to myself, what is he going to say in the book that we don't have in the lab?
unidentified
And one time I sat in a bathtub with a green light on and smoked crack.
I know!
chase geiser
We saw it!
harrison smith
Yeah, that's true.
He's going to write a tell-all book.
It's like, oh my god, there's more.
chase geiser
You gave us your laptop, dude.
harrison smith
What the hell do you mean?
There's a tell-all book.
It's all right here on screen for you.
It's incredibly embarrassing.
But these people are also interesting.
Liz Cheney, Adam Schiff, and Anthony Fauci.
So...
Let me just give you the rundown here in case you haven't read the story at Gateway Pundit.
Politico on Wednesday dropped an explosive report that Biden's handlers are strongly considering issuing preemptive several current and former government officials, preemptive pardons they mean, several current and former government officials who they believe will be in the incoming Trump administration's crosshairs.
The outlet notes that the regime has become even more panicked since Trump announced he was picking MAGA hero Kash Patel to drain the deep state swamp and ensure those who prosecuted Trump Do not escape punishment.
These figures include Senator-elect Adam Pencilneck Schiff, lying warmonger Liz Cheney, and COVID fraudster Anthony Fauci.
Again, I just don't get how you can preemptively pardon people who haven't even been charged.
Even the way that the Hunter Biden pardon was written, 11 years, all crimes, charged or uncharged, known or unknown.
It seems like a stretching of the pardon capability.
But if what the congressional report about coronavirus is true, Anthony Fauci is complicit in mass murder.
And there's no other way to put it.
chase geiser
He's complicit going all the way back to the 80s.
He knew for at least three years that hemophilia medicine was causing hepatitis and HIV and just let it roll.
I mean, this guy has been behind, not to mention all the experiments that he was caught doing with dogs.
I mean, you've seen the beagles and the gnats with the flesh-eating parasites on their faces.
And this guy is, he's like a Mengele-level lunatic.
harrison smith
Right, so can you pardon somebody for crimes against humanity?
I mean, you know, maybe you say, well, there's still a possibility of doing it at a state level.
Maybe there's a possibility of doing it at an international level and doing a fully-fledged Nuremberg 2.0.
chase geiser
Yeah, that's a good point.
It would be interesting if he pardons Bill Gates, but Bill Gates is still, you know, sentenced to death in Kenya or something like that.
harrison smith
Which, you know, if justice were to prevail, is not out of the realm of possibility.
unidentified
But...
harrison smith
But how, you know, I don't know.
I just don't know what to make of this because it's like, how would this rumor even get out that they're, you know, planning on doing this?
And of course, Chaney, Chaney was involved in that completely fraudulent show trial for January 6th.
chase geiser
Where they hired professional producers and they aired it on primetime TV, even though it was just C-SPAN with better cameras.
It was so boring.
harrison smith
Well, yeah, and it totally failed to get the audience that they wanted or have the cultural impact that they expected.
But at the end of the day, what they did was they put together something that looked like a trial, had all of the form and function of a trial, but you only had the prosecution present evidence and you denied the defense a right to defend themselves.
That is...
That is a show trial.
It is totally fraudulent.
And even though it didn't, I don't know, result in any charges as far as I know, evidence from there was used to smear people who are sitting in prison right now.
People like Stuart Rhodes, who the video evidence was withheld that proved that people lied about him and the Oath Keepers on the stand, and yet that hasn't been reversed.
So, you know, out of all the things we talk about Trump doing during his administration or in the first week or first day, Pardoning everybody on January 6th has to be a demand.
We should honestly have plans in place.
chase geiser
It was entrapment.
harrison smith
It was 100% entrapment.
chase geiser
There were people that actually did commit real crimes on January 6th.
But even then, it's moot because the whole operation was federal entrapment.
You have people that were obviously federal agents choking the flames, telling people to go into the building.
And regardless of the fact that some people that were just civilians did commit crimes, I do think because of the entrapment, then all the cases should be dropped.
harrison smith
I agree.
I agree.
And that's why it concerns me when it's, you know, Trump saying, if they're innocent, I'll pardon them.
It's like, no, they're all innocent.
It was a totally peaceful crowd up until the moment where the police started firing, you know, non-lethal ammunition into the crowd, pepper spraying the crowd, shooting, you know, flashbangs.
chase geiser
They call it a violent protest and a violent riot, but the only people that died were unarmed protesters.
harrison smith
Yes, were unarmed protesters that were murdered by the police.
And Jacob Chansley spent months on end in solitary confinement.
Like, think about what that means.
Think about being locked in a bright room where the light never turns off, where you speak to no one.
chase geiser
They literally locked him in Hotez's office.
harrison smith
Can you imagine being locked in Hotez's office?
chase geiser
He's wearing for a month now.
harrison smith
But seriously, I mean, these people need to not just be pardoned.
They need to get big settlements from the government for the pain and suffering they've been unfairly put through.
And that just has to be a hard line that we take.
And honestly, we should protest if that doesn't happen within the first month.
We need a deadline for some of these things for Trump.
Where it's like, because I don't want to be sitting here three years from now going, we just need to pressure Trump to get the deportations going.
It's got to be like, you got until April 1st to get the deportations up and running.
You got until a week after inauguration to get the pardons in.
Because these things literally are the signing of a piece of paper.
And there is no political risk whatsoever.
Trump's never going to run again.
chase geiser
Traditionally, pardons happened in the last days of a presidency, but this time that's inexcusable.
harrison smith
It needs to happen...
As soon as he's in office, because there's literally, you know, what are you going to say?
The leftists are going to cry about it?
Like, they're going to cry no matter what you do.
Just do what is necessary.
Start the deportations.
Pardon the January Sixers.
End the wars.
It's like, this stuff can happen in 46 days, 1 hour, and 10 minutes, right?
It can happen the minute he is inaugurated.
It's a signing of his pen.
It's legally illegal.
It goes through.
They can then counter sue and try to reverse.
I'm sure there are maneuvers they can try to use.
But Trump has no excuse not to do all of these things, no matter what, you know, mainstream media is going to crow about.
chase geiser
I agree.
And I think I honestly think he will.
And I know people are very concerned about some of the decisions he's made with with cabinet appointments.
And there's reservations about some of the decisions he's made.
But I've said it before on air and I'll say it again.
We do not need or deserve a perfect president.
We need and deserve an excellent one.
And I'm going to take the failings of Donald Trump with the good and weigh them against one another.
And I think we're going to come out very net positive.
harrison smith
You know, I agree.
And I'm also going to recognize that the system that Trump is fighting against is so deeply entrenched.
You know, I don't know it.
I certainly didn't expect Trump to come in and just be able to swing a giant hammer and knock everything down.
I would love if that was the case.
I would vote for that if that was on the docket, but But he's up against this system that has been slowly and surely insinuating itself into our government for decades on end.
It has to be an incremental reversal.
Otherwise, it's impossible.
chase geiser
Well, I think the beauty of this term under Trump, and there's evidence to back this based on the way he ran his campaign this time, is traditionally speaking, Trump has been very concerned with media coverage.
And he intentionally...
Provokes negative and positive coverage because he understands that there's no such thing as bad press.
It's better to be infamous than not famous at all in the famous words of Roger Stone.
But now I think Trump realizes that it literally does not matter what the mainstream media says because no one is paying attention except for people in the media industry and actually in politics.
And so with that being said, I don't think he's got as many reservations about making very controversial decisions in the same way that he did maybe his first term in 2016, where mainstream media had more leverage.
So he can go out and pardon all the J6ers, realizing that there's going to be a litany of bad press for at least 90 days straight about his decision, and that it doesn't even matter what the bad press says because no one's watching.
People are watching Joe Rogan and Tucker Carlson and Harrison Smith and Owen Schroer and Alex Jones and Two dozen other people that are independent alternative media outlets, Nick Sorters, Mariana Falls, you can just name them.
They're all over X now.
That's what matters, and they're going to cover it accurately.
And so I think Trump realizes that mainstream media simply is not at the poker table anymore.
They have cashed out.
They lost.
harrison smith
Yeah, and I hope he does realize that, and I think Barron has helped him realize that a little bit with his podcast strategy that truly, I mean, that's going to go down in history.
But here's the way that the mainstream media is used and can still be used against him.
If you remember, during his first administration, it was the mainstream media leaks from the intelligence agencies that got the political pressure to start some of the investigations.
Yeah.
If they wanted to investigate Trump, then they would leak something about Trump.
That would go wild on the mainstream media.
And then the very people that leaked it would go, well, now that everybody's talking about this, now this is a big issue, then we'll take it on and do an investigation.
And then you have the political will to back that up.
So mainstream media, I think, still has a role to play in this as the industry that manufactures consent for what the deep state wants to do.
chase geiser
Sure, but its ability to manufacture consent, I think, is drastically limited given that nobody trusts or consumes it anymore.
But yes, I do think it's still a player.
They're still going to use this strategy, but I just don't think it's going to work in the same way because nobody saw that leak that went on CNN.
Right.
harrison smith
Hopefully so.
Hopefully so, because, yeah, it's like all they have is whining at this point.
Like, all I know is if you have the institutional power to do what's right, pardon the January Sixers, then you have no excuse not to do it.
You have the power.
Use it.
That's all that we're asking, and that's why we hate the rats, because they have had power, you know, intermittently for the last...
However many decades and every time, they're like hyper-concerned with like, well, we don't want to set a precedent.
You know, if we do this to them, they might do it to us.
But it's the Democrats, they're already doing it to you.
So like, what are you worried about setting a precedent?
They already have weaponized the Department of Justice.
So you can't sit there and go, well, we can't open this can of worms.
Like the can of worms is open.
There are worms everywhere.
So use the power you have to benefit your side.
That's what politics is about now.
Sorry, that's just what it is.
And it's your fault that you didn't stop this early on.
So don't complain that we're at this point now.
chase geiser
I'm an only turtle who says gobble gobble.
I'm going way too fast.
harrison smith
Way too fast right now.
I'm going to slow down a little bit.
Incredible.
chase geiser
Can you imagine seeing that turtle crawling toward you?
What would you do?
harrison smith
You call the police or do you just take care of it?
Send a billion dollars to Ukraine.
I would immediately fund Ukraine if I saw this walking towards me.
So here's another story I want to get your take on.
We only have two minutes left with you.
Unless you want to stay on, but I know normally in the last hour of this show, you're running around getting things ready for the Jones show.
So I understand if you have to go, but this story.
Justice Sotomayor compares risks of transgender hormone therapy for minors to, quote, taking aspirin as she and Justice Kentonji Brown Jackson blast bans as sexist.
So there's a case of...
unidentified
I'll take aspirin off the shelf then!
chase geiser
Get rid of that crap!
unidentified
What?
chase geiser
It's that bad?
harrison smith
Yeah, I don't know if you realize this.
Yeah, aspirin will make your child's wiener fall off.
That's, I guess, what Sotomayor is saying.
chase geiser
Yeah, aspirin will make you sterile, man.
You'll never have children.
harrison smith
We're kidding, of course.
Please don't sue us, Bear.
We love aspirin.
It's amazing.
But no, I mean, yes.
The fact that this even got to the Supreme Court, to me, is like a condemnation of our entire system.
You're talking about Irreversible medical intervention and mutilation on children because they have, in the best interpretation, a severe mental illness.
I mean, nobody, you know, it's a severe mental illness, otherwise you wouldn't need surgery.
chase geiser
I can't think of a single mental illness that mental illness or mental health professionals have cured.
Ever.
I mean, I'm not even talking about the trans thing.
Just, alright, there's depression.
There's schizophrenia.
There's manic.
There's bipolar.
There's borderline personality disorder.
I mean, you can name a litany of mental health issues.
Clinical, diagnosable mental health issues.
We've had this industry, this field of study for at least 100 years, going back to Freud.
They have solved and cured none of them.
Why are we taking them seriously about whether or not we should sterilize children forever if they display any symptoms of the opposite gender?
Like, oh, your kid wears a pink shirt to school one day, next thing you know he doesn't have a dick anymore because the healthcare professionals say that you gotta chop it off?
But they've been wrong about every other illness?
I mean, come on!
harrison smith
I wonder if this is the type of argument they're making in front of the Supreme Court.
It's a convincing one, folks.
Chase Geyser, follow him on X at RealChaseGeyser.
He's gonna go get Alex Jones ready for his show, and we're gonna take your calls in the final hour.
Stay with us on American Journal.
unidentified
Thanks for joining us, Chase.
Thanks for having me.
Some people say that mass immigration into the United States can help reduce world poverty.
Is that true?
Well, no it's not.
And let me show you why.
This gumball represents the 1 million legal immigrants that the United States has taken every year on average since 1990. Now, who in the world deserves our humanitarian compassion?
The World Bank has one measure of the desperately poor of the world.
They make less than $2 a day.
And how many people make less than $2 a day in the world?
Let's start with Africa.
In Africa alone, there are 650 million people who make less than $2 a day.
650 million.
And in India, another 890 million people, desperately poor.
China adds another 480 million people.
Making less than $2 a day.
And unfortunately, the rest of Asia has a heartbreaking 810 million people who the World Bank says make less than $2 a day.
And finally, there's 105 million of Latin America's population that are desperately poor.
All told, the World Bank says there are 3 billion people in the world.
3 billion people who are desperately poor making less than $2 a day.
That's 3,000 gumballs.
And every year, We take a million and suggest that we've somehow made a humanitarian difference.
Of course, we don't pull our immigrants from these desperately poor populations, do we?
These people are too poor, too sick, too disconnected to make it here as immigrants.
We tend to pull our immigrants out of the better off poor of the world.
And Mexico tends to define the type of immigrant that we bring here because the plurality of people come from Mexico.
And Mexico is poor.
How many people in the world live in countries that have average incomes lower than that of Mexico?
And the World Bank tells us that that number is these 3 billion plus another 2.6 billion people.
5.6 billion people in the world who live in countries with average incomes below that of Mexico.
That's 5,600 gumballs.
And so what is it that the elites are telling us?
They're telling us that when we take this one million immigrants, that we somehow or another are tackling world poverty.
And we have to do it regardless of the effect on our unemployed, the working poor, the most vulnerable members of our society, regardless of the effect on our natural resources.
Even if we went by the most radical proposals in Washington, which are to actually double Our immigration to 2 million a year, which would totally overwhelm our physical, natural, and social infrastructures, we couldn't make a noticeable difference.
And we may be really hurting the impoverished people of the world because the million that we do take are among the most energetic, often the better educated, certainly the most dissatisfied people that if they did not immigrate would be the agents for change to improve the lot of all the people in these countries.
The true heroes in the global humanitarian field are the people in these countries who have the wherewithal to immigrate to another country but instead stay in their countries to apply their skills to help their fellow countrymen.
Unfortunately, Our immigration system tends to entice these very type of people to abandon their countrymen.
The impossibility of making even a dent is actually worse than it looks here.
Because last year, when we took one million immigrants, these countries added births over deaths, 80 million more people into the impoverished population.
And this year, Congress is bringing in a million legal immigrants.
And this year, according to the United Nations, these countries are expected to add another 80 million people.
And next year, you can be quite sure that Congress, unless stopped by the American voters, will bring in another million immigrants.
And these countries, unfortunately, will be adding Another 80 million people into these impoverished nations.
We could take 5 million a year, but we'd never get ahead of what's happening in these countries.
Not in this century.
Don't you see?
Immigration can never be an effective or significant way to deal with the suffering people of the world.
They have to be helped where they live.
The only place that 99.9% of these people can be helped is where they live.
Let's help them there.
harrison smith
Welcome back.
Ladies and gentlemen, third hour of American Journal is on.
I'll be taking your calls throughout this hour.
The number to dial is 1-877-789-2539.
1-877-789-2539.
I'll be taking your calls.
I still have a lot of stories to get to and videos to show you.
Try to get to them.
Try to get to as much of it as possible.
The Daniel Penny trial that we covered extensively yesterday has still not come to a conclusion.
We have an update as to the jury deliberations.
And apparently Jordan Neely, the man who died, his parents have now filed a lawsuit against Daniel Penney.
So even if he is declared not guilty, he's got, I'm sure, years worth of a civil trial to deal with.
Which is completely outrageous and barbarous behavior.
Just totally shameless.
From these people who's...
Jordan Neely's just had a massive track record, just a homeless drug addict.
Criminal who was wanted, had a warrant out for his arrest on the day he was killed for a previous time where he had attacked somebody on a subway.
Daniel Penny jury breaks without verdict after asking to hear key testimony rewatch videos in New York City subway chokehold case.
This is where we're at now in this trial.
Jurors sought a second look at the body cam footage of NYPD officers arriving at the scene as EMS tried to revive a 30 year old Neely as well as a video of Penny's precinct interrogation interview with detectives in the wake of the fatal May 2023 encounter.
Quote, I wasn't trying to injure him.
I'm just trying to keep him from hurting anybody else, Penny told the two detectives during the videotaped interview shown to jurors, adding, that's what we are taught in the Marine Corps.
Later, the 12 jurors, 7 women and 5 men, asked to rehear a portion of the medical examiner's testimony when she was cross-examined by defense lawyers as they questioned her determination that the chokehold killed Neely.
Dr. Cynthia Harris testified that, quote,"...no toxicology result could have changed my opinion even if Neely had enough fentanyl in his system to put down an elephant." Which basically is an admission that her claimed cause of death is completely invalid.
She's literally sitting there going, I would have said it was the chokehold that killed him, even if it was proven beyond any doubt that he had enough fentanyl in him to kill an elephant.
It's like, okay, then your conclusion is invalid, and we should be able to ignore it.
It's just...
We're just really, really praying that the jury, in this case, is actually focused on justice and not some culturally engaged sick desire to get revenge on an individual because of the perceived crimes of a group.
We hope they don't throw him to jail because he's white, is what I'm saying.
He faces up to 15 years behind bars if convicted of the top count.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has not said whether his office would seek jail time if Penny's found guilty.
Again, it's like, you know, if he's acquitted, God willing, if he is found not guilty, it will be just another example of Another one of these things where it's like, it'll be good.
I hope he is let free.
He deserves it.
The fact that we're even in this position is already terrible and requires massive corrective measures.
It is completely insane.
Meanwhile, Sarah Silverman says she's become less political because, quote, no one wants to hear from celebrities anymore.
Why's that?
I wonder why that is.
Liberal Comics says it wouldn't have made a difference if she had been more outspoken during the election.
Wow.
Don't sell yourself short.
Sarah, you may have driven even more people towards Donald Trump with your incredibly off-putting and condescending ignorance about the world around you.
Sarah Silverman explained why she wasn't as outspoken about her political views this election season in a new interview with Minnesota Star Tribune.
The liberal comic put out videos encouraging voters to elect President Obama during the 2008 and 2012 campaigns.
She also spoke at the 2016 Democratic National Convention.
The comedian explained she wasn't out campaigning for the Democrat Party this time because of her comedy tour schedule and because she felt that voters weren't interested in hearing what celebrities have to say about politics.
Yeah.
chase geiser
Yeah.
harrison smith
I don't even have anything to add to that.
It's just, yeah.
Yeah, no, nobody cares.
Yeah, no, nobody cares.
You're right.
Scrabble back into the hole you came from, lady.
We surely have that video just on tap, the video of her describing how the American flag makes her feel scared.
Maybe that's why she didn't want to come out.
Maybe because they already had enough people out, you know, representing the Kamala Harris campaign, openly hating the American people themselves.
Yeah, maybe that's not a great strategy for winning the support of the American people, telling them how you hate their country and don't think it should exist.
Some other positive news here.
We got a couple of positive.
Well, we'll do some positive news here in the third hour.
Yeah, there's her pretending to be an American.
From Gateway Pundit, keep it up.
Almost two dozen George Soros-backed prosecutors have been removed from office since 2022.
A few years back, left-wing billionaire George Soros went on a spending spree and got prosecutors elected all over America, who then went to work doing the exact opposite of what prosecutors are supposed to do.
They were soft on crime, freed dangerous criminals without bail, and refused to prosecute certain cases based on so-called social justice.
Once the public figured this out, these prosecutors started getting challenged for office or even voted out in recall elections.
Since 2022, almost two dozen of them have been kicked out of office, but it's no time to slow down.
They all must go.
And this is sort of a perfect example of what we're trying to overcome with Infowars.
What I mean by that is, why does it take...
Until you experience the bad thing before you do something to stop it.
It's a struggle.
It's a struggle.
These prosecutors were not shy about what they wanted to do.
They did not, to a large degree, I mean they did somewhat, they're socialists, they're communists, they lie as a As we breathe air, right?
It's natural to them.
It's necessary for their continuing existence to just deceive constantly.
And I'm not even...
I'm being a little facetious, but I'm not really.
And I'll point back to Jimmy Flanagan running for...
A councilman here in Austin and his chief of staff, there was leaked conversations where he was talking to a group of socialists going, guys, don't worry.
I know he says he supports the police and he says that he's not going to cut their budget, but that's what we need to say or else nobody will vote for us.
But trust us, we're on your side and once he's in office, he'll do all of the socialist crazy stuff.
It's just nobody would vote for us if they knew.
So we have to hide.
They are open about this.
They admit it.
So they do lie to a large degree.
Don't get me wrong.
But if you looked at the campaigns of these prosecutors getting elected in the first place, their whole thing was like, I'm all about restorative justice.
I think I'm a Black Lives Matter card-carrying member, and we're going to really defeat this racial police force that is the only reason that there's a greater percentage of black people in prison right now.
So...
Like, how did you not know this was going to happen?
Like, this is the frustration.
We're sitting here going, George Soros, evil scumbag responsible for crashing the pound and just an infinite number of schemes that have caused an unimaginable amount of suffering around the world.
Like, this just evil gremlin.
Is pouring money into small town races to get people into office who will not fight crime, who will be on the side of the criminals.
We yell this from the rooftops.
Apparently nobody's listening.
They vote for the person that says their number one issue as a prosecutor will be going after Donald Trump.
They vote for that.
They get what they vote for.
Everything gets worse.
Everything is terrible.
God only knows how many thousands more people are victimized.
Innocent people just going about their day, having their lives suddenly and irreparably destroyed by some random crack addict that the prosecutor, you know, decided was an angel and should be let out without bail.
You go through all this suffering, you go through all this chaos and misery, and then finally you reverse it and you get back to normal.
And it's like, if you just listened to us before.
If you just...
Again, a modicum of skepticism or just a thought in your mind.
Like, people just get swept up in whatever the latest trend is, and they're just like, yeah, we gotta have restorative justice.
Those sound like nice words.
I'm not gonna think about what it means.
I'm not gonna think about what that actually means physically, tangibly in the world around me.
I just like the words restorative, and I like the words justice, and together they sound nice.
So I'm gonna vote for that guy.
Oh my God, I can't believe I just got killed.
You know, like...
It's just, it's extremely frustrating.
It's, again, just another one of these things.
Good.
I'm glad.
I'm glad that all these prosecutors have gone away.
I'm glad two dozen George Soros-backed prosecutors have been removed from office since 2022. Why were they in office in the first place?
That's the real question we need to ask.
That's the real thing we need to get over, is falling for these obvious tricks over and over and over again.
Please, please, America, stop voting for prosecutors that are on the side of the criminals.
Is this really so hard?
Stop putting people in positions of power.
Stop listening to doctors who are paid by the pharmaceutical companies.
Just stop it.
Just please, just stop doing all this crap and then we won't have to spend years and years trying to claw back just normality and any semblance of anything, anything good.
But sorry, that was good news.
Sorry, no, this is good news, though.
I am happy about it.
21, 21 George Soros-backed prosecutors ousted since 2022. So, good.
Thanks, guys.
Speaker Mike Johnson, meanwhile, finally announces no more aid to Ukraine.
We're going to wait to take the new commander-in-chief's direction.
House Speaker Mike Johnson announced on Wednesday night press conference that the House would not approve any more aid to Ukraine in light of President Trump's victory and upcoming inauguration.
This comes after a second threat against Johnson of an attempt to elect a new speaker.
The Freedom Caucus think he's been an abysmal failure and want to replace him, and he is trying to appease them and retain power.
So, just some modicum, some slight baby step towards peace there, which is nice to see.
Alright, we got more stories, but I gotta get out to phone calls.
Let's go to White-Tailed Magasteed on election day, at election day.
You're on the air, White-Tailed Magasteed.
unidentified
Hey, what's up, Harrison?
I called on Election Day and I was getting excited.
I was screaming and stuff like that.
So that was a nickname they put up.
So, yeah, I just want to talk to you about this Peter Hotez guy.
This total slob goes on MSNBC with his hair all over the place.
And he's talking about how they have these viruses set up, mosquitoes in Florida.
And for him to just, you know, arrogantly just go on MSNBC and say, yeah, the day after Trump is inaugurated, we're going to launch viruses, we're going to do all this stuff.
You know, you almost can't believe that they're saying this publicly and let alone he's on MSNBC.
They give him this platform to do so.
And he doesn't even comb his hair.
He's in his little laboratory with his evil laughs and breathing heavily in his microphone, talking about how they're just going to get everybody sick and they want total control.
How is it that these people have such big platforms on mainstream media?
How do these people get taken serious?
And the problem is, That you kind of have to take what they say serious because they tell you in advance what they're doing.
And now more people are talking about it, which we can now be proactive to all this.
I mean, it's insane that nobody has just totally canceled this guy.
This guy's glorified on TV talking about this evil stuff that he wants to do.
And it's totally fine.
I mean, look at this guy.
Look at the hair.
He is a total slob, this guy.
I hope he's listening.
I don't know.
harrison smith
You know, I wouldn't doubt if he was.
He's got like some picture of a, I don't know, Native American Jaguar or something.
Yeah, no, you're exactly right.
It's absurd.
It's ridiculous why these people are allowed to go on and talk about this.
And of course, the way they phrase it, like clearly the way we interpret it is exactly how it sounds.
It's that he's going, hey, on January 21st, all of these novel viruses are going to land at his desk.
But what he's actually doing...
He's pointing out a fact that they have either released man-made viruses, which I happen to think bird flu is one of those, considering the fact that it didn't exist before They decided it should, and we've gone over the labs in South America where some of these things were created and where the whole outbreak started.
But they know that there's these novel viruses that they created spreading around.
They know that there's coronaviruses happening in China, again, that they create and release on purpose.
They know that the migrants are bringing in these long-dead viruses like whooping cough and polio, things that have not existed in America for 50 years you shouldn't need a vaccine for, but Now you do because they're bringing in people from the third world that don't have protection against this where these things are still endemic.
And so they know that there is going to be an increase in disease because of their failure, because of their lack of care of actually stopping the disease.
And so they're just getting out in front of it and preempting it and saying it's because of anti-vaxxers.
So they're causing the rise in viruses because of their disease.
Irresponsible experiments or because of their open border experiment or all these other things.
They know that there's going to be a rise in these diseases and so they're preempting the response to that by saying it's because of anti-vaxxers and so actually it's a healthcare emergency that we censor the internet.
That's what they're getting at in my interpretation.
What do you think about that, Steed?
unidentified
I mean, it's a spot-on analysis.
I mean, they have no control over you.
That's what this all comes down to.
And that was their first thing was, okay, let's see how much control we have.
They had a little bit of control in the beginning because people were like, what is going on here?
But as time goes on, that two weeks is like the magic time frame.
And then there was a pushback.
And they just, they hate that four years ago that America resisted.
And they hate that their majority of the population is not back.
and now they're just going total psychopaths on trying to do all this.
And they have, here's a little minion of the establishment named Peter Hotez going on MSNBC, not even forgetting to comb his hair.
It's just who he is.
He's probably pale as a ghost because he never leaves his little laboratory.
And everybody knows if he's caught in public.
Like, if he's caught in public, we need to publicly humiliate them verbally, peacefully, lawfully.
harrison smith
I was going to say, he's hiding in his cave because he has the vision, a nightmare vision of Alex Rosen looming over him asking to debate.
unidentified
I remember that.
He went to his house, and he's just like with his tail legs and his tail body just going back into his dungeon, and now he's like crying because he got caught.
Man, these people need to get bullied.
We've got to bring back bullying for the right reasons.
He is the core definition of that.
harrison smith
I can't even look at the Well, he looks deeply unhealthy, which is just another layer of irony.
Yeah, it's very disturbing these people have any power whatsoever.
And let me just lay out, because we've talked about it so many times before, the fact that Eventual One was held just a few months before the outbreak of COVID. It predicted, seemingly, exactly what happened to COVID. But I want to explain the reasoning that they used.
Because we've pointed out a million times, when they do this game, this scenario planning, like Eventual One, their primary concern and the overwhelming topic of discussion is how do we control the narrative?
Now, here's the way that they justify this, because that might sound crazy.
It's like, well, but they had to have talked about the disease.
Here's what they say.
They go, even if it was a lab leak theory, we have to keep that hidden.
Why?
Because...
Even if it was our fault, even if it was a lab leak, the fact is the disease is out there.
We want to defeat it.
We want to combat it.
The only way we know how to do that is through vaccines.
But now if people think it's a lab made virus, then that will cast suspicion or doubt on the whole medical science industry, which will make people less likely to get the vaccine, which means the vaccines will be less effective.
They won't do as well in spreading the disease and more people will die as a consequence.
So that's the that's the line of logic and reasoning that they use is we have to keep the lab leak origin of this virus secret in order to keep faith in the medical industries up in order to get most people vaccines in order to stop the disease.
So if you're out there talking about the lab leak, even if it's true, you're being irresponsible because if people knew it was a lab leak, that would cause less vaccines, which would lead more deaths.
You're killing people by telling the truth about where this virus came from.
That's the chain of logic that they extrapolate in Event 201. So just so people understand how this works and how they justify internally to themselves, because, again, people don't like lying, generally.
Even...
Congenital liars don't like lying, and they try not to as much as they can.
And so even I think in their own minds, they're going, well, I'm lying about this lab leak, but it's not because I created a virus and started a global pandemic and changed the whole world and killed millions of people.
It's not that I'm ashamed of having done all of this.
It's just that I want what's best in the future.
I don't want to kill people, so it's a responsible thing.
I'm going to not tell people it came from the lab.
I'm going to deny that and try to hide that.
For the greater good.
What a brilliant image to bring up that last moment because that's exactly what it is.
For the greater good, I have to...
Really, I'm the one suffering.
It's painful to me to lie about this, but I'm doing it and I'm taking those slings and arrows because I just want people to be better and I want them to trust the system and I can't have their trust damaged by some sort of fact-based statement of where the virus came from.
So again, I just want to lay That's how the reasoning goes, and that's why they feel justified in censoring people, even when what the people are saying is true, because they are the greater good.
It really is as simple as that.
Thanks so much for the call, Steve.
Let's go to Tim in Seattle about Nuremberg 2. Similar topic here.
Go ahead, Tim.
You're on the air.
unidentified
How's it going, Harrison?
Good.
Yeah, the open threat of another bioweapon release is enough for me to really question the sanity of every single American if they're not pushing back against this.
Because, again, they've declared their intention.
They were raised in depopulation.
And if we're just going to sit back and just allow them to openly mock us, they just got done what we just went through with Thanksgiving with millions of Americans mourning the loss of their loved ones.
And they're going to do it again and again and again.
And the only real way...
I swear to God, the only real way is for public outrage.
If you really want to convict them in a court, you have to do it in the court of public opinion first, or they're just going to continue to do it.
Because, again, if you are looking for pats on the head from influencers that are looking for pats on the head from politicians that are getting pats on the head from Klaus Schwab, you are in the wrong—you're not going about it the right way.
Your voice matters, is all I'm trying to say, is that the American people's voice matters, not the social influence.
harrison smith
Yeah, 100%.
And, you know, it's just like we told you with the UFO scare, you know, luckily that never came to fruition.
But you got to get out ahead of this because, you know, once it's launched, Think about COVID. Like, nobody thought about COVID and then all of a sudden it was here and people were just like, what?
A disease?
There's a new disease?
Wait, and we're shutting down?
What?
And they're just like caught in this, you know, it's like a flash flood.
I mean, they're staying there one day and suddenly they're being swept along and they're just like, what's happening?
What's going on?
But if you can preempt that, if you can go out and go, hey, you know they're going to launch a new disease, right?
You know it's going to be either bird flu or it might be monkeypox or it might be the sloth disease they've come up with.
Like, just be talking to your friends and family about this so that when it is launched, they aren't just caught totally unaware.
They go...
Oh, this is what he told me.
How did he know that again?
Oh, he knew that because he knew they were going to use it in order to get the digital currency, in order to collapse the economy, whatever it is.
Get out there in front of it, and you can actually prevent people from being swept along in the flash flood of misinformation whenever they do drop it, which they're going to soon, one way or another.
We'll go out to a lot.
I'm just going to hit the ground running with phone calls on the other side.
So everybody who's holding now, hopefully I'll be able to get to you.
Bill, Tim, Joshua, Doug, Hammer, Hardy, Mr. Process, Hobbs.
I'll try to get to all of you.
On the other side, I do want to remind you to go to thealexjonesstore.com.
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It's time for the VIP section.
We'll be right back.
unidentified
Welcome back, folks.
harrison smith
We'll go direct back to your calls.
unidentified
This just dropped from Nick's Store Tour.
harrison smith
Five minutes ago, NYPD have released unmasked photos of the UnitedHealthcare CEO assassin.
This comes after it was revealed bullet casings had messages of, quote, deny, depose, and defend per ABC. So there you see some sort of security camera footage.
This doesn't look like it's at the same Starbucks as it was before, but apparently he pulled down his mask.
People saying he looks almost female from the side.
That was another bit of speculation that was going around.
People saying, you know, something about UnitedHealth maybe wasn't covering transgender things.
And, of course, these days when you see some sort of unexpected or tragic shooting, you know, the first thing you think is, was it a tranny?
Because, you know, there have been so many recently.
Let's go to your calls now.
Bill in Pennsylvania.
Thanks for calling in.
You're on the air about this topic.
The UnitedHealthcare CEO. Go ahead, Bill.
You're on the air.
unidentified
Hey, Harrison.
Yeah, I just...
I haven't seen this angle covered, but I just wanted to point out that UnitedHealthcare was responsible for dispersing all of the payments for the COVID Provider Relief Fund.
So I don't know if, like...
You know, we had that report come out, the congressional report, that was pretty damning on the whole situation.
And I guess apparently this individual was being looked at by the Department of Justice, so maybe he was going to flop on something that they didn't want to get out.
Because if I remember correctly, I tried searching it yesterday, but there was a lot of that money was reported stolen.
And then when I was Google searching it yesterday, it's It seems like they're saying, oh, it was just overpaid.
It wasn't actually stolen.
But they're still trying to recover.
I think it's like $100 million.
So not only were they responsible for dispersing the payments for the Provider Relief Fund, but so that's like, you know, if you had extra expenses for, you know, you had to buy extra PPE or, you know, you had other additional costs or you lost money because of the pandemic, the government was going to pay you out.
For losing that money, but they also disperse payments for, if you were uninsured during the pandemic, if the provider, if you saw a provider, they could submit your social security number through this portal that UHC was administrating, and they would basically give you a temporary insurance coverage, and then they would pay you for, you know, doing a COVID test.
So, I don't know, it just kind of lines up with that congressional report coming out, and I haven't seen that angle covered, so I'm just Interesting.
harrison smith
Yeah, just while you were talking, I was sort of Googling what you were saying.
UnitedHealth Group is paying over $3.3 billion in relief programs for care providers.
So this is UnitedHealthcare.
This is from back in March of this year.
And this headline is even crazier.
White House summons UnitedHealth CEO as payment paralysis enters third week.
So yeah, you know...
It's difficult to judge these things because the evidence that we have now, as we laid out and while we were covering it earlier in the show, it all does seem to point towards a disgruntled customer with the words denied on the bullet casing and stuff, but that could easily be a red herring.
If, you know, he's being assassinated by some sort of medical mafia group because he's putting billions of dollars at risk or because he knows something and is going to testify and they don't want him to.
There's lots of reasons why, you know, other criminal elite would want, not saying this guy was criminal, but that criminal elite would want to take somebody out.
And I guess it'd be pretty easy to go, yeah, let's just write deny on a bullet.
You know, let's set up some situation.
I guess at this point it's kind of like, If the guy gets caught, which I have the feeling he's going to be, I think it'll be proven that it was some sort of personal vendetta.
If he's not caught, I think we can pretty much say it was a professional job because how you get away with murder in broad daylight in New York City as a white guy, I mean, that's just, that's impossible without professional help.
Very interesting stuff.
Thank you for that, Bill.
Do we have anybody else on that?
Yeah, Hammer Hardy in Florida has a comment on the UHC CEO. Go ahead, Hammer Hardy, you're on the air.
unidentified
Hey, Harrison, good morning.
I just wanted to say, I was watching the video, so I own guns, and I was watching the video, and it looked to me, so I heard people say something about the gun jamming, but usually with a jam on a semi-auto, what you have to do is, when the cartridge fails to eject,
or if the round fails to insert itself into the barrel, what you have to do is you have to take the magazine out first, Then you usually pull back on the slide or you pull back on the charging handle if it's a rifle or a pistol.
Then the failed cartridge will eject.
Then you have to put the magazine back in, slide it again to chamber another round.
But what I saw was every time he fired a round, he pulled back on the slide.
So I thought that was weird.
It was acting more like it was a single-action semi-auto pistol, which they do make those.
So I thought that was just really, really strange.
I didn't see him pulling the magazine out, clearing the jam and then putting that.
harrison smith
Yeah, that's interesting.
So, you know, I think the video that we played earlier, their interpretation of that was based off of the...
I thought that it was a.22 and that, you know,.22s maybe you have to rack sometimes, but it wasn't.
It was a 9mm, so that sort of invalidates that analysis.
I mean, what about this being a 3D-printed gun?
That's the other speculation is that 3D-printed guns maybe have this issue.
Do you have any experience with that or does that make sense to you?
unidentified
Well, I mean, it's still going to function the same.
It's just, you know, I mean, the design doesn't change just because it's a 3D-printed gun.
Like, I worked with 3D-printed AR-15s, and it's the same thing.
I mean, whether it's made out of some type of polymer or if it's made out of aluminum, it's still the same exact machine.
Not only that, but I'm also...
I don't think that this guy was a professional hitter, but I don't think he worked alone either.
I heard somebody say it's not normal for a professional to be in a Starbucks waiting for his mark.
Well, he could have been waiting there while his spotter I don't think this guy was working alone, personally.
But I don't think he was a professional either.
harrison smith
Interesting.
See, I would think if you weren't going to look, if you were not working alone, to me, the number one assistant you would want to have would be a getaway driver of some sort, even just, you know, somebody on a scooter or somebody there to just like hold it.
If you're going to get away on bikes, just stand there and hold the bike.
Because of what I was saying earlier about like escaping on a bike is weird in New York because you can't just leave your bike around the corner and expect it to be there.
So like that's a risk that I don't think anybody would take if they're planning on a murder like this.
To me, the thing about the Starbucks is like, I don't know.
It's just, I think if you're a professional, if you're just like there to do a job, you're just gonna, even if you're just like standing, even if you go to a Starbucks, like you're not gonna order anything.
You're not gonna put yourself on camera in any way.
I think you're just gonna stand on the corner, twiddle your thumbs and, you know, wait for your mark to come because, you know, you want that big payday or whatever.
To me, it seems like, again, it sort of contributes to this idea that somebody who, my total speculation, lost a loved one or something and is sort of suicidal.
Kind of doesn't, you know, is like, this will be the last thing I do and that's fine kind of thing.
So, yeah, I'll stop and get Starbucks and maybe I'll be on camera, but...
Who cares?
Once I kill this guy, I don't care what happens to me.
That sort of thing, just getting into the psychology of the shooter, total speculation.
But very interesting input.
Thank you for that, Hammer Hardy.
We got Hobbs in Nebraska also wants to get in on this conversation.
Hobbs, go ahead.
You're on the air.
What did you see in this video?
unidentified
Hey, Harrison.
How's it going?
harrison smith
Good.
Thank you.
unidentified
Hey, so first off, the messages written on the shell casing There's a book by a man named J.M. Fineman called Delay, Deny, Defend, Why Insurance Companies Don't Pay Claims and What You Can Do About It.
And the friend who brought this to my attention said that this is a new chapter in the What You Can Do About It section.
Anyway, so I wanted to call in about what I saw in that short video because gun stuff is kind of the special interest hyperfixation of my particular brand of autism.
And judging by what the Drinking Bros podcast was saying, and now that we know it was a 9mm, and from what I saw, you know, I own suppressors and shoot suppressors and stuff.
What I saw there was the suppressor looked...
Big, and big means heavy, and heavy on the end of a locked-breach, short-recoil-operated 9mm pistol means malfunction.
Now, a factory suppressor that you get from a company that makes suppressors will have a piston and spring assembly in the rear called a Nielsen device.
It's a recoil booster, which makes it so that the weight of the suppressor hanging on the end of the barrel does not cause a short-stroke malfunction like we saw in the video.
So this tells me that that suppressor on the end of his gun either lacked a Nielsen device or it might have been homemade because suppressors have serial numbers.
They're very well tracked.
They're regulated under the National Firearms Act.
They're registered to individuals.
They're easy to track.
So it might have been a homemade suppressor without a Nielsen device.
The second thing that I saw is that when he pulled the trigger, The lack of cartridge extraction and ejection did not surprise him.
He pulled the trigger and immediately racked the slide, which tells me that he had experience, at least a little bit of experience, and expected it to short-stroke malfunction like this.
So he had to put at least a few rounds through this pistol and suppressor setup before he did this job.
Now, the Starbucks visit and the e-bike getaway, and the potential of this being a homemade suppressor, That's
what I got from this.
harrison smith
Wow, what a thorough breakdown, Hobbs.
That was very impressive.
Yeah, I can't find a single thing to disagree with you with.
Awesome stuff, folks.
That's why you got to be watching Roads to Liberty.
Roads to Liberty on Rumble, right, Hobbs?
Well, I hope people tune in because you clearly know what you're talking about.
Thank you for that.
I really do appreciate it.
I like guns, and I think I know about guns, and then you hear from somebody that actually knows about guns, and it's like, oh my god, I'm very stupid in this regard, actually.
I point and pull the trigger.
I don't know about all this technical stuff that Hobbs brings to the table.
Very, very interesting analysis.
Thank you for that, Hobbs.
Let's go to Tim in California now.
He wants to talk about Pete Hegseth.
Go ahead, Tim, you're on the air.
unidentified
Good morning.
Yes, my question, well, is that did Pete Hexbeth bang bang bang?
No.
And he's 44 years old.
You know who did that?
Was Eric Swalwell.
You know how old he is?
44. So you've got two 44-year-old guys.
One of them banged Fang Fang.
The other one didn't.
And Fang Fang rang back to China.
She ran away to China as soon as she got caught banging Eric Swalwell.
You know what happened to Eric Swalwell?
Nothing!
He's still there.
He's still on all the top secretive committees.
It's perfectly fine!
Yeah, don't worry about it.
Yeah, Eric Swalwell's fine.
But Pete Hexett?
Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no.
There's some rumor, some word, or whatever.
Anyways, I want to hit two quick things here.
George Soros and his people, hey, LA is the second largest city in America.
We overwhelmingly voted out George Gascon.
That guy was awful, DA, okay?
tim in california
And then the last thing I want to hit real quick, at the Thanksgiving break, I called in and talked to Maria Z. God bless Maria Z. And I mentioned, isn't it weird that if you want to do things properly to become a U.S. citizen, it is required that you obtain 16 vaccinations, and one of those is COVID. And she explained brilliantly...
unidentified
Do you know why it is that you have these 180 countries and they don't have to have any at all?
And of course the answer is every one of those people, if they get harmed and we make them take it, they can sue these people and get rich.
But we, as American citizens, oh no, we can't sue them.
You know why we can't?
Because our leaders in government, hey, they made this backdoor deal where we're all going to get rich and the deal is you can't sue us if something goes bad.
And here's the kicker.
Here's the kicker.
All along, they knew that about 10 pennies worth of ivermectin would solve the problem, and that's why they had to shut it down.
No worst is allowed.
harrison smith
Yep, 100%.
You are dead-on accurate.
And, of course, thanks to Eden Bieber, the researcher we've had on the show several times, he uncovered the agreements that Pfizer signed with countries because, you're right, outside of America, they don't have the liability protection that they enjoy here.
So they had to go in and individually and sort of blackmail, you know, on the assumption that like, hey, if you want to get out of this pandemic, you need this vaccine.
If you need the vaccine, you need to sign this agreement that you're not going to sue us.
So they really strong armed every other country into signing these agreements before they would deliver.
The supposedly necessary vaccines.
So you're exactly right.
That was all baked into the plan.
They knew that was the case and knew that they had to have this worldwide pandemic in order to strong arm these other countries where you could sue pharmaceuticals into giving up that right in order to get the vaccine.
So yeah, amazing stuff.
Thank you so much for that, Tim.
Joshua in Georgia wants to talk about beef with Shania Twain.
I don't even know what this is about.
Joshua, you're on the air.
unidentified
Hey, good morning, sir.
Yeah, I had a little joke about that.
I put the blame of this trans madness squarely on the shoulders of Shania Twain with her song, Man, I Feel Like a Woman.
harrison smith
What about Dude Looks Like a Lady?
I mean, there's lots of musical contributions to this phenomenon.
unidentified
Right, right.
But I actually have some inside information about this assassination, well, about the insurance company.
I know somebody who is customer service, deals with people calling and asking why this, why that.
Their co-pay went from $2 six months ago, and now it's up to $30.
And I don't know, I mean, it's just a massive spike in their co-pay, and I don't know, you know, like, you know, the whole theory that, you know, somebody died, and that this guy knew, and so he's getting revenge.
You know, maybe they couldn't afford the medication, or maybe it's the Rainmaker thing, you know, where they just, like you said, you know, denied, denied, denied, denied.
And...
That's all I have to say about that.
But my original call was, if I got a little bit of time, it's not going to take long.
It's kind of a road.
But the whole Hunter Biden getting pardoned thing, everybody's going at this exactly the wrong way.
This whole thing from start to finish was a setup to get him charged with some nothing stuff and then don't sentence him until just before the election, after the election.
So now they could do this little, well, we pardoned him for the stupid stuff.
But also, blanket pardon him for everything else.
But I don't think this was a decision he made.
I think it was a plan from the beginning, you know, with Merrick Garland involved, especially.
Oh, Trump and Poitie did this, and I just...
I think it was just a plan from the start.
They don't do anything accidentally.
harrison smith
Yeah, no, I get exactly what you're saying.
So they charge him with the small things in order to justify the pardon, but the pardon covers the big things they didn't charge him for and never had to put on the books in the court record.
So, yeah, that's...
That's very clever of them.
And I've always thought that the only reason they went after Hunter Biden at all was because they needed to be able to point to that to go, see, we charge people on the left too, so they could justify their absolutely unfair and totally illegitimate charging of Donald Trump for 900 different felonies.
So I've always thought the Hunter Biden...
You know, trial, him getting in trouble at all was only to save Democrats' face so they can point to that and go, but we see we charge him too, even though, as we've laid out, it was a lesser charge and he was pardoned and the real concerning stuff from the laptop was never even brought up.
So yeah, it's all psyops.
It's psyop upon psyop.
I think you're exactly right, Joshua.
Thank you so much for that call.
Let's go down to Doug in Kansas.
You want to respond to a caller from yesterday, maybe the day before.
I don't think we took callers yesterday, but go ahead, Doug.
You're on the air.
unidentified
Yeah, I was going to refer to that walker that called in and tried to get you in a fuss.
harrison smith
Hold on.
I'm not able to understand you, Doug.
I don't know if you can take us off speakerphone or try to talk directly into the phone, but I'm not able to understand you.
unidentified
Can you hear me now?
harrison smith
It's somehow worse.
icarus in wisconsin
Somehow worse, huh?
I don't know this phone...
harrison smith
Doug, I'm going to go to Mr. Process.
Stay on the line.
See if you can switch your phone to speaker or something else, and we'll get back to you in just a second.
Hopefully the connection will be better.
We've got about five minutes left in the show.
Mr. Process, you're on the air about accelerating down the rabbit hole.
Go ahead.
icarus in wisconsin
Yeah, a real quick first regarding the assassination kind of related to the topic I called in about.
It's also possible that with the bullet, he had some custom bullet.
Sometimes when I shoot suppressed to make them extra quiet, use a lighter load of gunpowder, and then you'll have that.
harrison smith
And that fits in, too.
I can't remember if it was Hobbs or the guy before him saying that the suppressor was likely homemade.
icarus in wisconsin
Yeah, then you'd have to re-rack it because there's not enough gunpowder to cause the blowback.
But I think this is just going to be kind of related.
We're going to see more of these types of things as we accelerate down the rabbit hole and all this conspiracy stuff gets revealed.
And most importantly, all the people that have been pretending to be asleep, a lot of Democrats and stuff, have to come to the reality check.
And we're kind of going to accelerate down the rabbit hole.
So many of the problems that Trump has to deal with are just way bigger than he talks about, obviously, the immigration, migration madness.
And at the hospital, just because COVID's over doesn't mean the hospital holocaust isn't over.
You know, there's still smoking people, and I think conservatives and white people that are being targeted to be killed in hospitals.
And I thought it would...
I think right now we're just about 8%, under 10% for sure down the rabbit hole, and it's going to accelerate during Trump's presidency.
As a lot of people like Owen Troyer says, you know, they're living in a reality that doesn't exist, and then the majority of the country has denied their policies.
As just being ridiculous, you know?
Like, they tried to sell the boosters, and it's not going to be a long amount of time before people realize that they've been sold similar things in the vein of immigration and even the LGBTQ stuff, you know, and trans stuff.
You know, they're being sold one type of sexual life experience where they should be enjoying a different life experience.
harrison smith
Yeah, you know, and that is the thing about awakening.
You know, once it starts going, the dominoes start falling, and you start realizing just how fraudulent absolutely everything is, because it's fraud built upon fraud built upon fraud.
And, you know, if you're listening to my voice now, if you didn't watch our show yesterday, the interview with Alex Newman, I mean, it was a mind-blowing one, and it really...
It's simultaneously the bottom of the rabbit hole.
It's like when you fully understand the global scope of this mission that they're on to enslave humanity and the various vectors that are being attacked by all these various vectors.
All these different things are being put into place to build this structure of total control over the entire world.
It's both the bottom of the rabbit hole and it's the view from on top of a mountain just looking at it all laid out below you.
That is the real awakening and you realize how serious it is and how multifaceted and massive this is.
But that being said, I was thinking about this yesterday because when you...
Read something like the real Anthony Fauci and you realize how thoroughly corrupt the medical system is.
Or you listen to Alex Newman and you hear about the way the UN is holding these meetings where they're getting all the religions together to merge into one and deny their factual basis for going to love Mother Earth and morally this is the correct way to think even if it's not true.
When you understand the scope and scale of this, it can seem overwhelming, but the reality is that, like, it's just awareness, and if people are aware and they're pushing back, at the end of the day, there's maybe, you know...
At the most, like 10,000 people in the world that are like the real drivers of this, the real bully in on it.
They believe completely and they, you know, get the positions at the top of these pyramids to enact their policies throughout these massive organizations.
It's really not that big of a challenge.
It's only this big of a challenge when it's in the shadows, when it's operating in secret, when nobody knows about it, where they're implementing these things quietly.
Once it's exposed, once the light is turned on them, they're actually not so scary.
They're actually not so powerful.
It's all smoke and mirrors and illusion and fronting.
It's all cap, right?
It's all just fiat.
It's all by their demands and words, and they don't actually have real tangible power.
It is the man behind the curtain.
Once you can pull that back and see the wizard for who he is, then their whole scheme comes crumbling down.
We want to accurately express what a big deal this stuff is and what a giant threat it is, but at the same time, don't blackpill about it.
Don't think that it's impossible to overcome it.
At the end of the day, We can easily reverse things and get back to some semblance of normality.
But you mentioned, Minister Process, the killings at hospitals.
Well, in the UK, of course, they're just doing away with any...
Pretending.
UK seniors, this is from Infowars.com, UK seniors would have huge tax incentive to choose assisted suicide if it became legal.
Less than a week after the UK's assisted suicide law passed its second reading, people are already musing about the many reasons the elderly and ill might opt for a lethal injection.
One of the things they're saying is, you know, maybe if you choose to end your life, we won't take all of your inheritance from your grandchildren.
So if you want your grandchildren to benefit from your lifetime of hard work, Kill yourself and, you know, let Muhammad take your place.
That's going to do it for us, folks.
It's the American Journal.
Stay tuned.
The Alex Jones Show begins in 90 seconds.
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