Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
Conquest and empire is as old as civilization. | ||
Babylon, Egypt, and Greece. | ||
They all built empires in an attempt to rule the world. | ||
The Roman system at its peak dominated the known world. | ||
Complex governmental systems were developed to control diverse populations. | ||
During the period between the 15th and 19th century, new empires emerged, And again waged war for supremacy. | ||
The nobility as well as the thriving merchant class were financed by a handful of private banks. | ||
Many of the great money houses would hedge their bets and finance both sides of a war. | ||
Sophisticated intelligence gathering networks gave the financiers a clear edge over the governments they were slowly gaining control of. | ||
On the 18th of June, 1815, agents of the British arm of the Rothschild family looked on as Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte fought desperately to save his army from the jaws of a British-Prussian pincer attack. | ||
A Rothschild agent was able to get the news of Napoleon's defeat at the hands of Lord Wellington to Nathan Rothschild a full 20 hours before the news reached London. | ||
Nathan, the head of the British arm of the Rothschild family, put out the rumor to the London Stock Exchange that Napoleon had won the war. | ||
Stocks plunged by 98%, and Rothschild was then able to buy up the entire British economy for pennies on the pound. | ||
When the news of Napoleon's defeat finally arrived, stocks soared. | ||
Britain was now the undisputed ruler of Europe, and Rothschild ruled England. | ||
The already dominant British Empire grew even more aggressive. | ||
Her troops and bureaucracy spread across the globe. | ||
The sun never set on Britannia's holdings. | ||
The banking cartel funded, in fact, since... | ||
About 1800, they have funded both sides of almost every war. | ||
And, of course, they're getting their interest off of the loans that they've given the various governments and the wars that they have actually helped stimulate and create. | ||
By 1900, Germany was a rising force and a leader of the Industrial Revolution. | ||
World War I, for instance, there was absolutely no reason to have World War I, except that it was an ideal opportunity for... | ||
The banking cartel to make a pile of money by funding both sides of that particular war. | ||
On June 28, 1914, the heir to the Austrian-Hungarian throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, was assassinated while traveling in a motorcade. | ||
unidentified
|
*gunshot* | |
The Black Hand. | ||
A Serbian secret society with connections to French and British intelligence took credit. | ||
unidentified
|
World War One had begun. | |
companies financed by Rothschild controlled banks in Germany, France, England and Austria bankrolled all | ||
unidentified
|
the factions. | |
At least 20 million were killed in the war. | ||
It was a conflict so terrible, the people vowed to never fight again. | ||
They dubbed it the War to End All Wars. | ||
The question is, why did they want war? | ||
Well, first of all, is money and power. | ||
But secondly, they wanted to create the League of Nations. | ||
They had this in their plans all along, and as a consequence, once the war was over or about to be over, they began to formulate this idea of a League of Nations so this would never, ever happen again. | ||
Hundreds of years of practice made the British experts at hiding their empire behind puppet governments and councils. | ||
In the name of stopping all future conflicts. | ||
They proposed that countries would join a League of Nations. | ||
And it worked perfectly, and there was never a war again. | ||
We'll be right back, folks. | ||
See you, American Journal. | ||
Stay with us. | ||
unidentified
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It's Friday, March 21st, in the year of our Lord, 2025. | |
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 scene back. | ||
Get everybody in the stuff together. | ||
Okay, three, two, one, let's jam. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to the American Journal for this Friday edition. | ||
We got a lot of news to talk about today, and I'm definitely going to open up the phone lines. | ||
We've been a little lax on phone calls recently, but honestly, the other shows have been making up for it, but we're not going to let them steal our thing as of it. | ||
We've taken a lot of your calls. | ||
We have a lot to talk about and a lot of videos to show you. | ||
As always, of course, more developments in the domestic terror campaign. | ||
That I think is a lot more widespread than we even understand. | ||
Because there's a confluence now of the Tesla attacks, the swatting attacks, but also just sort of generalized violence. | ||
I guess you wouldn't call it terrorism, but I never go on this site next door, but it's like the local social media site. | ||
I went on yesterday because I was looking for a piece of furniture. | ||
I saw these posts of just like, yep, another arson attempt in the Greenbelt, you know, in the creek area behind the neighborhood. | ||
And it's just like on a practically daily basis, people are just finding small fires. | ||
Luckily, they're being caught in time. | ||
But they always have accelerant. | ||
There's like lighters sitting there. | ||
Sometimes they're near homeless camps. | ||
Sometimes they're just in parks. | ||
And it's like this is not even going reported. | ||
It's hardly getting, you know, posted about just on small social media sites that... | ||
You're not going to see if you don't live in our zip code. | ||
And you just wonder how much of that is going on. | ||
We've got other stories today about people just being routinely released out of prison. | ||
Somebody in Austin was arrested for attacking an officer. | ||
26 felony indictments. | ||
26 times this guy has been caught committing felonies. | ||
And yet he's out on the street just tweaking away. | ||
Tweaking away. | ||
Insane on meth and attacking police officers. | ||
And it's just like... | ||
Every once in a while you just get this... | ||
You just get bowled over, washed over with the flood of just how insane everything is in this country. | ||
Just how terrible everything is. | ||
And how the criminals are running the asylum and some are doing it in a coordinated fashion. | ||
Others are just... | ||
Just little independent terror generators. | ||
Out there on the streets, clogging everything up for everybody else. | ||
So we're going to try to convey that. | ||
We're going to just try to convey to everybody the wholesale chaos that's being wrought right now. | ||
And what we could possibly do about it. | ||
Because when you really look at the scale and scope of what's going on, it's daunting to say the least. | ||
But let's begin today as we do every day with our daily dispatch. | ||
All right, here it is, folks. | ||
Your Daily Dispatch for Friday, the 21st of March, 2025. | ||
As PJ Media puts it, Molotov cocktail hour is over for Tesla bombers after DOJ indictments. | ||
All normal human beings can agree that if a crackpot doesn't like the car you drive, it's not okay for him to firebomb, shoot, key, or otherwise vandalize that vehicle. | ||
This should hold true whether you're one of the Jimmies on late-night TV, Rick Wilson, or Antifa. | ||
Sadly, for three indicted men who are accused of going after Tesla cars for political reasons, they are learning this the hard way. | ||
On Thursday, Attorney General Pam Bondi announced that severe charges against the accused Tesla arsonist has been leveled. | ||
Bondi says the days of committing crimes without consequences have ended. | ||
She told domestic terrorists who are warming up in the bullpen, let this be a warning. | ||
If you join this wave of domestic terrorism against Tesla properties, the Department of Justice will put you behind bars. | ||
And they're now seeking... | ||
Sentences of at least 5 up to 20 years for these acts of domestic terror. | ||
We'll have more information about this. | ||
More videos every single day of people, and I use the term loosely, petulant beings, demon-like creatures wandering amongst us, just casually going by and scratching lines into Teslas or... | ||
Rubbing their butts on Tesla. | ||
I mean, it really is just a cacophony of madness. | ||
It's a circus out there. | ||
And we'll show you some of those videos. | ||
But it is increasing. | ||
Now at least one who used Molotov cocktails to set fires to Tesla cars and charging stations has been charged. | ||
Well, three have been charged. | ||
And again, we'll look into some of who these people are. | ||
I believe, I don't have the numbers in front of me. | ||
I'll give the story later. | ||
Out of the four people who have been charged so far, happen to be transgender. | ||
And it turns out transgenderism might be an indicator for violence in the future because, I don't know if I need to be the one to tell you this, it's a mental illness. | ||
It's a mental illness and it's making itself known. | ||
And we'll get more into that later as well since apparently you're discriminating against mental ill people by telling them you don't want them. | ||
Making up your armed forces. | ||
We'll get into that later. | ||
Meanwhile, Trump shutters Department of Education. | ||
President Donald Trump has signed an executive order to begin eliminating the federal Department of Education once and for all. | ||
The Department of Education has become a bloated bureaucracy that's more interested in pushing its own agenda than helping kids learn. | ||
It's time to put the power back in the hands of parents, teachers and local communities. | ||
President Donald Trump has signed that executive order to begin eliminating the federal Department of Education once and for all. | ||
Which they are taking the tack I suggested, which is emphasizing that they're not destroying the Department of Education. | ||
They're sending it back to the states. | ||
The states will now once again be in charge of their own education, which is fine and good and as it should be. | ||
And as it was until the Department of Education was created in, I believe, something like 1974, at which point American education overall took a nosedive off a cliff and hasn't recovered. | ||
And again, we'll show you some of the outcome of the Department of Education here in this show, which includes vast swaths of the population incapable of reading English. | ||
So when something fails utterly to do even the simplest portion of its obligations, you can eliminate it and rest easy knowing that nothing bad is going to happen because it's already terrible. | ||
So, how much worse can it get? | ||
It's kind of like the Middle East in that regard. | ||
Kind of like the Middle East. | ||
Like, any change or suggestion of change is perfectly valid because, well, we see how it's going now. | ||
Meanwhile, and this goes back to our first story there, Judge orders Trump to send trans male prisoners back to women's prison and continue sex change treatments. | ||
A federal judge has ordered that the Federal Bureau of Prisons send two male prisoners back to women's prisons. | ||
Their taxpayer-funded hormone therapy must also be resumed, said Judge Royce Lamberth. | ||
A federal judge has ordered that Federal Bureau of Prisons send those two male prisoners to female prisoners in preliminary injunction against President Trump's executive order, preventing men from being housed with women. | ||
Again, we'll get back into this same sort of injunction happening with the transgender ban. | ||
In the military? | ||
And, you know, we're just in this bizarro world where transgenderism has somehow, beyond all comprehension, been accepted to a degree that attempting to assert the most basic difference between sexes is now subject to judicial review. | ||
It's all absurd. | ||
And again, we'll get into that a little bit more later. | ||
I feel like, I don't know, I feel like we have to just keep insisting that we just treat men like men and women like women and just override all of the objections to basic reality and the fundamental binary nature of gender. | ||
Meanwhile, Zelensky demands Russia return all territory gained since 2014 in his continued push for forever war with Russia. | ||
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky announced in Helsinki, That Russia must surrender all territory it gained since 2014. | ||
A ridiculous non-starter and obvious scheme to continue the war going as long as humanly possible. | ||
Again, we'll get more into that. | ||
The head of German intelligence now is saying that the Ukrainian war should continue for at least another five years. | ||
Five years. | ||
Because that was always the point of it. | ||
It's always supposed to be a forever war, which is why they're so mad that Trump is attempting in some way to bring it to an end. | ||
Zelensky keeps just doing this flip-flop thing where he agrees to certain points and then flip-flops and decides that actually I'm going to make an even more outrageous demand that there's absolutely no way it will ever even be considered, let alone provide the foundation for an actual settlement. | ||
And at a certain point, I feel like Trump's patients are going to run out, and we're just going to have to oust Zelensky, and it shouldn't be that hard. | ||
It should not be that difficult. | ||
And if you're wondering on what exact mechanisms can be used to oust a Ukrainian official from power, you can consult Joe Biden. | ||
Joe Biden has a lot of experience in using American influence to dictate who is and who isn't a part of the official Ukrainian government. | ||
So you can ask him for tips. | ||
Meanwhile and finally, NTSB recommends 68 bridges in the U.S. be evaluated for risk of collapse. | ||
The National Transportation Safety Board recommended Thursday 68 bridges across 19 states be evaluated with a vulnerability assessment to determine their risk of collapse if involved in a vehicle collision in the wake of last year's deadly collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore. | ||
Over the last year, NTSB identified 68 bridges built before 1991 that don't have a current vulnerability assessment. | ||
The recommendations were issued to 30 owners of the 68 different bridges across the country. | ||
NTSB officials announced that. | ||
Thursday, some of the bridges include the Golden Gate Bridge in California, the Brooklyn Bridge in New York City, and the Sunshine Skyway Bridge in Florida. | ||
Amongst some of the 68 bridges that are now possibly at risk of imminent collapse, we don't actually know because there hasn't been an assessment done. | ||
We should probably get those done so we don't have a repeat of what happened with the key bridge last year, which still hasn't basically been explained at all. | ||
So far. | ||
But I have a feeling that that's because our caller who called in and identified the likely cause of the problem was correct in that it has to do with climate change initiatives and the forced implementation of new fuel recipes, | ||
basically. Different levels of different materials in the fuel dictated by climate change concerns. | ||
Which causes the ship's engines to seize up. | ||
It happens pretty often out in open sea when it's not that big of a deal. | ||
But when it happens in a harbor with a very popularly used bridge, well, it can be an issue. | ||
It can be a little bit of an issue, but hey, at least we have our freedom, right? | ||
Sure, I mean, our bridges are collapsing, but I've been told that any desire for infrastructure is somehow conflicting with a desire for basic liberty. | ||
At least that's a response I got when posting. | ||
Pictures of, or videos of very futuristic-looking Chinese cities. | ||
It's like, yeah, they might have bridges that don't fall down, but where's their freedom? | ||
It's like, who told you bridges was incompatible with freedom? | ||
That's nonsense, actually. | ||
It's actually a great excuse. | ||
You can use that one at home. | ||
Somebody complains that you haven't done the dishes or something. | ||
You can remind them, hey, at least you have your freedom. | ||
Okay, because apparently that's an excuse for not upholding basic infrastructure. | ||
Why can we not afford bridges? | ||
Didn't we just pass a multi-billion dollar infrastructure bill? | ||
Was any infrastructure built for that or was that a climate change scam? | ||
No, I'm sorry. | ||
The climate change scam was the Inflation Reduction Act. | ||
That's right. | ||
Yeah, it's kind of hard to deal with things when the bills that you put forward to deal with specific problems are in fact very thinly veiled. | ||
Policies having to do with completely different things. | ||
So we had the Inflation Reduction Act. | ||
That was actually a climate change bill. | ||
I'm sure the infrastructure bill was actually about, I don't know, something gay. | ||
Something, I'm sure it was about progressing homosexuality in Ghana or something equally absurd and nonsensical and having nothing to do with infrastructure. | ||
Yeah, we did pass a multi-billion dollar bill, so you'd think that maybe a bridge or two would be built, but so far, nah. | ||
No, nothing, actually. | ||
Nothing in that regard. | ||
So that's your Daily Dispatch brought to you, of course, by Infowarsstore.com and the AlexJonesstore.com. | ||
And have I reminded you recently about Optimal Human? | ||
It really is incredible stuff. | ||
I'm going to go ahead and put a scoop in my water during the break, and it's as easy as that. | ||
You literally just put a scoop in water. | ||
I like to add a drop or two. | ||
Or tin of lemon juice in it. | ||
I think it makes it taste even better. | ||
It already tastes pretty good. | ||
It tastes just like a green tea. | ||
But it's got just an incredible array of vitamins and minerals and supplementation that you need on a daily basis. | ||
Really, it has everything you need all day. | ||
You could eat like trash and take this, and you'd still get all of the vitamins and minerals that you need to exist, including things like adaptogens, which are just incredibly powerful. | ||
And you can go to thealexjonesstore.com slash Harrison to let them know who sent you. | ||
I was talking to Rob yesterday, InfoWars Rob, and he was like, he was simultaneously angry and gratified that he was like, I have been telling people about Optimal Human for a year. | ||
And he's like, I keep telling people. | ||
He's like, occasionally people will listen and they're like, oh my God, this stuff's amazing. | ||
But like... | ||
Everybody thinks I'm just blowing smoke or something and suddenly you come out with this commercial and suddenly everybody's raving about Optimal Human. | ||
I'm like, I'll give you credit, Rob. | ||
I will give you credit. | ||
But yeah, it's one of these products where once you take it, you want to tell other people about it. | ||
You want to tell people why you have so much energy, why you're feeling so good. | ||
It's Optimal Human. | ||
Available now at thealexjonesstore.com slash Harrison. | ||
I don't know if it's on sale or not. | ||
It's the type of thing that you don't even want to put on sale because it sells out so quickly at full price and for very good reason. | ||
Ashwagandha, lion's mane, prebiotics, and just everything. | ||
Vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin D, vitamin K, thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, vitamin B6, B12, biotin, calcium, iron, magnesium. | ||
I'm halfway through the list. | ||
It just goes on and on and on. | ||
So just check it out yourself. | ||
See what it can do for you. | ||
You can get the starter pack that comes with a bottle so you can measure it out to a precise amount. | ||
Again, you can dress it up however you want. | ||
I bet a little honey in it would taste good. | ||
A little lemon in it tastes really good. | ||
But regardless, it tastes good on its own. | ||
It's very refreshing and an incredibly powerful supplement on sale now at thealexjonesstore.com slash Harrison. | ||
and let them know who sent you. | ||
Now, I have a lot of videos to get to today. | ||
As always, I'm going to try my best to get to as many as possible. | ||
And I have a lot to do with the Democrats just | ||
just failing relentlessly. | ||
It is actually kind of... | ||
Funny how desperate and flailing the Democrats are at this point and how they're trapped. | ||
They really are in a trap of their own making and it's fascinating because simultaneously the Democrats failed because of the radicals in their party, because of the most extreme positions that they seem to have hung their hat on, things like transgenderism and other just socialistic Just nonsense policies that nobody with a brain actually agrees with, | ||
especially if they understand fully what is actually going on. | ||
In other words, if you tell people, hey, should people be able to be who they are? | ||
People go, well, yeah. | ||
So then they write up the poll. | ||
People approve of transgenderism because they want people to be who they are and express themselves fully. | ||
And it's like, okay, do people understand that that means that you're agreeing to things like schools secretly, Transitioning your child and deliberately hiding it from you, even up to the point of getting them medical intervention without your knowledge. | ||
Once people know about that, they don't think it's so great actually. | ||
Once their daughter is beaten in a sporting event by a man a foot taller than her with 100 pounds of muscle mass on her, they decide maybe this isn't the benign policy that they thought it was. | ||
So you've got the Democrats with all these insane policies that nobody actually likes. | ||
And that caused them to lose and is causing them to lose at an increasing rate. | ||
Every time they check, their approval rating has been going down for the last year or more. | ||
Yet, and yet, it's those voices that have the most power in the Democratic Party and in the Democratic Party base and the power structures. | ||
It is the AOCs and the Bernie Sanders who have all the influence. | ||
So they are tied like a millstone to these Programs, these ideas, this ideology that is absurd and hateful and abominable to most American people. | ||
So it's very funny. | ||
So it's very funny to see them struggle to deal with this because then you get things like Chuck Schumer saying on national television that you're bad for wanting to keep your own money. | ||
And people saw this and it's like such an asinine thing to say. | ||
It's such a... | ||
Like, it's the type of thing that you know politicians believe, but you're not supposed to say it out loud. | ||
But he is saying it out loud, and when you ask why, the answer is because he's being outflanked on his left. | ||
He is actually, you know, at risk of losing his Senate minority leadership role and is desperate to cling on to it by pandering to the socialists in his party, which everybody who's not a socialist hates. | ||
So again, rocking a hard place. | ||
Let's go to clip number 17. Here's Chuck Schumer. | ||
Attacking Americans and saying the quiet part out loud. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
I made my money all by myself. | ||
How dare your government take my money from me? | ||
I don't want to pay taxes. | ||
unidentified
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Or I built my company with my bare hands. | |
How dare your government tell me how I should treat my customers, the land and water that I own, or my employees? | ||
unidentified
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They hate government. | |
Government's a barrier to people, a barrier to stop them from doing things. | ||
They want to destroy it. | ||
We are not letting them do it, and we're united. | ||
Yeah, no, we hate that. | ||
Yeah, no, we want to keep our own money, and we don't want the government micromanaging our personal business. | ||
So it's like, how do you win an election when your messaging appeals only to people who have no money and have never built anything and are just seething in a puddle of envy of the people around them? | ||
Like, it's not a winning message. | ||
Unless, of course, unless, and this is where it all comes together, You design a culture and a system that leaves everybody broke and seething and angry and pissed off and owning nothing and feeling hopeless. | ||
Then you can weaponize those people, you can get their votes, and you can continue to exploit and oppress them. | ||
It's actually a very efficient closed system that they're operating here, creating their own constituents by making everybody poor and miserable. | ||
And then targeting the poor and the miserable. | ||
Now, again, this is, you know, that statement from Chuck Schumer, absurd, ridiculous. | ||
You never think you'd hear an American politician actually saying this out loud. | ||
These people are bad because they want to keep their own money. | ||
It's like, I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, this is America, sir. | ||
You seem to think we're somewhere else. | ||
So very funny to see Chuck Schumer saying the quiet part out loud, but even funnier to hear Kathy Hochul try to justify this. | ||
Here's Kathy Hochul being asked about Chuck Schumer being at risk of losing his position of minority leadership. | ||
Clip number one. | ||
What did you make? | ||
unidentified
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Did you approve of what Senator Schumer decided to do to let that funding bill go through, not let the government shut down? | |
And do you think he's the right person to lead the Democrats in the Senate? | ||
Listen, we have benefited tremendously here in the state of New York of having the influence of the majority leader for the Senate, our home senator. | ||
Look at the Chips and Science Act. | ||
We have Micron with 50,000 jobs coming to upstate New York. | ||
He helped get that through the Congress and directed that programming here in New York. | ||
The Gateway Tunnel, thousands of good-paying union jobs are being created. | ||
What we're doing at the Second Avenue subway. | ||
So he has been my partner, and I don't want him to lose that clout. | ||
Why do we want someone else in a different state that have that kind of weight in Washington? | ||
I say keep him right where he is. | ||
He's doing a great job in that respect. | ||
And people can debate whether or not that was the right decision. | ||
But don't forget who brought it. | ||
The Republicans created this scenario. | ||
Do you think it was the right decision? | ||
They created the chaos. | ||
We need to point the finger where it belongs. | ||
Do you think it was the right decision? | ||
unidentified
|
Republicans created the chaos. | |
We need to point the fingers where it belongs. | ||
A notable non-answer. | ||
unidentified
|
I do want to ask you about what the president did with the Department of Education. | |
So she says this talking point. | ||
Republicans are responsible for this. | ||
We have to point the finger at them. | ||
He's like, what does that mean? | ||
She's like, Republicans are responsible. | ||
We have to point the finger at them. | ||
Like that was a non-answer. | ||
He says, thank you. | ||
Thank you for noticing. | ||
Yes, it was. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Welcome back. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Coming to you live this morning from the InfoWars compound here in Austin, Texas. | ||
And we might not be long for this world. | ||
The bankruptcy saga continues. | ||
Of course, I don't have any particular information to bring you. | ||
You can watch Alex's show. | ||
He put out a couple videos about it on X. And I learn about it in the same way you do, by watching those videos. | ||
So apparently it could be a matter of weeks before Infowars as an entity goes away. | ||
And it will be a sad day if that happens, like Alex often references. | ||
Like the capturing of an eagle standard from a Roman legion. | ||
The symbol of Infowars is a powerful one. | ||
Alex Jones bankruptcy judge rejects the latest Infowars asset bid. | ||
That is the latest decision. | ||
Inexplicable, though it may seem. | ||
However, no matter what happens, thealexjonesstore.com is where you can go to support us and make sure that we continue to set the narrative for the country and indeed the world as the populist awakening continues at a pace. | ||
And all over the world. | ||
Leaders are rising to meet the challenge. | ||
People like Conor McGregor in Ireland has officially announced his intention to run for president of that nation. | ||
And not a day too soon, because they are really on the cusp of total destruction, as is all of Europe, as the European Union Council, whatever non-governmental, tyrannical organization they have up there. | ||
You know, telling them how exactly to kill themselves. | ||
Just approved another 7 million migrants into Europe in the ongoing, you know, genocide against the European people happening worldwide. | ||
And we can focus on that a little bit. | ||
But I want to stick for the moment to American politics and the plight of the Democrat Party stuck between a rock and a hard place. | ||
In other words, stuck between the corporate do-nothing, lackluster... | ||
Scumbag corporate Democrats and the even worse communistic, socialistic freak show parade of the socialist Democrats. | ||
So it's all, again, this is all very fun. | ||
This is all a very fun little situation for them to be in as they tear each other apart. | ||
As one side wants a platform that could at least appeal at some point. | ||
To some group of people, and the other side wants to screech angrily and light things on fire. | ||
And we just get to watch. | ||
It's very fun. | ||
Let's go now to clip number four. | ||
This is Stephen A. Smith, who's become an increasingly popular political pundit. | ||
Here he is, actually calling out his own staff members on the show about what it just did. | ||
Just a terrible... | ||
Path the Democrats are going down. | ||
Here's Stephen A. Smith. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
I got a story to tell the Democratic Party. | ||
Are you ready for this? | ||
Yeah, I'm ready. | ||
Rather than telling us what we should vote against, maybe you should present us with options of what to vote for. | ||
Just a thought. | ||
I mean, my God, are you okay, Michael, with me suggesting that? | ||
Are you okay with me, Sherry, suggesting that? | ||
Rashawn, Galen, and all of the bunch of leftists that's under my umbrella trying to act like they're independents when they're full of it? | ||
I'm talking about my old damn staff. | ||
I can say it with love and affection, because I don't mind. | ||
I'm a centrist. | ||
I think my man Rashawn is a centrist. | ||
The rest of these damn people working for me. | ||
I mean, what left-wing party are you associated with? | ||
I mean, you gotta believe this stuff. | ||
You gotta listen to it to hear it. | ||
I'm gonna say it again. | ||
Rather than come to folks with what to vote against, how about telling us what we should vote for? | ||
That's a great idea, Stephen. | ||
Here's the problem. | ||
The things you want people to vote for are just... | ||
The worst. | ||
They're just terrible. | ||
No one wants what you're offering them. | ||
So it's not going to work either. | ||
The reason why Democrats are constantly saying what to vote against is because all they have is trying to frame basic, sensible, nationalistic, just obvious policies as if they're fascism to convince people to vote against it by calling Trump Hitler. | ||
Like, that's all you have. | ||
Because if you were actually to Try to offer people something. | ||
It would be women on their, or men on their female basketball teams, and thank you, you know, castrating their own children. | ||
It would be offering people to take more of their money, to spend on more pointless projects overseas. | ||
You have nothing to offer anybody. | ||
That's why nobody's offering anything. | ||
You have to run a negative campaign forever. | ||
Because you're a part of a party that's involved in a permanent revolutionary state, which will eventually end in the desired destruction of the nation, so we can all be folded into a communistic one-world government. | ||
That's the problem that you're trying to deal with. | ||
But I love it. | ||
As much as, you know, Alex is like infamous for getting mad at the crew, but it's... | ||
It's never been anything like that. | ||
I can't even imagine. | ||
I mean, how awkward was it once they went to commercial break? | ||
How awkward would it be if I was sitting here like, these idiots, Dan and Matt, Sean, CJ, these morons, these right-wing fascists. | ||
It's like, and could you grab me some coffee during the break, please? | ||
Thanks. Democrats, man. | ||
Leftists, liberals. | ||
It's just who would want to be with these people? | ||
I don't get it. | ||
I don't get what the appeal is. | ||
Neither do they, I don't think. | ||
But this is what's happening. | ||
They're literally going in each other's throats because half of their party are morons and the other half are also morons. | ||
So it's just a bunch of morons. | ||
It's a big retard fight. | ||
Let's go to clip number five now. | ||
This is a Republican congressman again giving The Democrats' advice that they don't deserve. | ||
And, you know, word of warning to the Republicans, let them keep going. | ||
Don't interrupt your enemies when they're making a mistake. | ||
We're going to watch a congressman telling the Democrats exactly what's wrong with them and exactly what they need to hear, which is not strategically a good move. | ||
Strategically, what we should be saying is, oh God, no, please don't make AOC the minority leader. | ||
Oh, God, please don't make AOC the face of your party. | ||
No, we're so scared of her. | ||
She's such a powerhouse. | ||
She has such good ideas. | ||
We can't stand up against that. | ||
Please don't. | ||
Let's go to clip number five now, please. | ||
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Because we need to hear new, fresh, bold voices. | |
That's what the American people want. | ||
And if the party doesn't do that, the party is about to be finished. | ||
I hope. | ||
That AOC, Pramila Jayapal, Greg Cesar, I hope they're the new face of the Democratic Party because Republicans will be winning elections all over the country if that is the face of the Democratic Party. | ||
Are you crazy? | ||
Are you? | ||
Listen, a district like mine, that Joe Biden won by 10 points. | ||
Okay, 10 points. | ||
Kamala Harris won by half a point. | ||
Okay, I won by six and a half points, 24,000 votes in a district that has 85,000 more Democrats than Republicans. | ||
Why? And you're right. | ||
Yeah, but you ran against a cornball candidate. | ||
He was your friend. | ||
He was not my friend. | ||
He was your friend. | ||
You had someone running against you who was not a strong candidate. | ||
And we still have consultants and big money controlling the Democratic Party. | ||
But you're missing it. | ||
She didn't outperform Kamala Harris in her district. | ||
But here's my point. | ||
New York looks no further than New York, where issues like cashless bail have been a disaster, issues like sanctuary state status, congestion pricing. | ||
In districts like mine, where Democrats on paper should win big, they're losing. | ||
And so if the messenger is AOC, who, by the way, was originally from my district. | ||
She grew up in Yorktown, not the Bronx. | ||
If AOC is the face of the Democratic Party in swing districts all across this country, she will mobilize voters way more than Nancy Pelosi ever did. | ||
Let me just add the... | ||
Yeah, you're trying to explain basic reality to people. | ||
Who are incapable of comprehending it. | ||
So I guess we'll just laugh at them. | ||
I guess we'll just laugh at them instead, which is exactly what Senator John Kennedy did yesterday. | ||
Clip number six, talking about Chuck Schumer and the Democrats. | ||
And their, let's just say, historically low approval ratings. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
Many Democrats are angry at Schumer. | ||
Among them right now, we've all seen the news. | ||
He's about as popular as chlamydia. | ||
But that to me says as much about the Democratic Party as it does about Senator Schumer. | ||
What it tells me is that the loon wing of the Democratic Party is firmly in control. | ||
Now, that's great for the Republican Party, but it's bad for America. | ||
These people are deeply weird. | ||
For example, no honest person whose IQ is above his age doesn't believe that biological sex doesn't exist. | ||
But they do. | ||
That's what I mean when I say they're deeply weird. | ||
Our Republican secret plan for dealing with the Democrats is called Operation Let Them Speak. | ||
But that's good for our party, but it's bad for America. | ||
Deeply weird. | ||
I really like that phrase. | ||
These people are deeply weird. | ||
That's a good way to put it. | ||
The weirdness isn't surface level. | ||
It's the deeper you plunge, the weirder it gets, folks. | ||
These people are deep. | ||
Remember when they tried to make J.D. Vance weird? | ||
Remember they were like, J.D. Vance is so weird. | ||
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I'm just like fishing with his sons. | |
I'm sorry, what gender are you again? | ||
Yeah, it's... | ||
They're very weird, but they're not just weird. | ||
They're insane and dangerous, okay? | ||
Weird can be like quirky. | ||
You can be a little weird, and Thomas Massey's a little weird. | ||
Thomas Massey built his own house with trees he harvested from his own land. | ||
That's a very weird thing to do. | ||
It's very, you know... | ||
Idiosyncratic thing to do. | ||
Is that the right word? | ||
It's an interesting thing to do. | ||
This is beyond weird. | ||
You people are psychotic. | ||
Okay? It's like, you know, Hannibal Lecter. | ||
He's kind of a weirdo. | ||
He's deeply weird. | ||
Yeah, that's why you put a mask on him and put him in a straitjacket, put him in a prison because of how weird he is. | ||
He's weird like the Democrats are weird. | ||
And liars. | ||
And also, their policies are deliberately designed to destroy the United States, which is weird. | ||
That is weird to me. | ||
The weird part about the Democrats is they keep voting for people who basically don't believe the United States should exist. | ||
That's very weird to me. | ||
People like Boston Mayor Wu, clip 15, saying things like this. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
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Every human being has the legal right to come to the United States and seek asylum or shelter. | |
Every human being on the planet has an intrinsic right to come to America and be housed by us. | ||
Every single human being, apparently, in the world is just an American. | ||
They just haven't arrived yet. | ||
So they haven't gotten their free basket of goodies. | ||
Now, people born in America don't get... | ||
What they get. | ||
So they're actually kind of better than you. | ||
They're actually more American than you. | ||
Everybody who's not an American is in fact more American, more potentially American than you. | ||
As we show images of places that are not America yet. | ||
Not America yet. | ||
So like when you have a party that is split between people that think that America's existence Is bad and needs to be fixed, and people who believe that America is evil and deserves to be destroyed, | ||
the weird part is anybody votes for either of these sides. | ||
It's all very weird. | ||
It's also very ironic and non-factual. | ||
Let's go to clip number 10 here, because AOC and Bernie, the heads, the idols of the more insane side of the Democratic Party, are on a tour. | ||
Bashing billionaires, despite the fact that the vast majority of billionaires are their number one contributors and the ones pulling the strings in their own party, including of them themselves. | ||
So here's AOC and, or this is AOC and Bernie are going on this tour, and here's a collection of facts that show how ridiculous the entire concept is. | ||
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Let's watch. | |
Such an irony to Democrats talking about oligarchy because, of course, for every one billionaire that backed President Trump, Kamala Harris had two. | ||
Nine of the ten richest counties in America are represented by Democrats. | ||
65% of Americans making over $500,000 a year today are Democrats. | ||
75% of hedge fund managers who make political donations donate to Democrats. | ||
And 95% of political donations from the top three management consulting firms go to Democrats. | ||
Meanwhile, President Trump absolutely crushed with Americans who make under $100,000 a year. | ||
The Democrats are the party of the wealthy. | ||
And Donald Trump is representing the working class because he simply lifted the pro-worker elements of the Democrats' agenda when they abandoned the working class to cater to their rich base. | ||
This is all performance art. | ||
And what's so upsetting about it is they are being paid by the American people to serve them, and they are doing nothing of the kind. | ||
Fight oligarchy, the puppets of the oligarchs say. | ||
It's Orwellian to the extreme. | ||
But, you know, as much as we can mock these people, two things we can't forget. | ||
Yes, it's very funny how badly they're doing. | ||
It's very funny how their attempts to rectify their collapse is in fact accelerating it. | ||
Very funny stuff. | ||
High comedy. | ||
Great bits by the Democrats. | ||
The problem is, for one thing, like I said earlier, they are, through their policies, making Americans more miserable and broke. | ||
Poor and disenfranchised. | ||
And that's what they thrive on. | ||
That is the grist for their mill. | ||
They live on human misery like vampires. | ||
So the more their policies have been implemented for several decades, the worse things have gotten, the more hopeless and angry people have gotten, the more potential constituents they have. | ||
And it's a very convenient feedback loop for them, constantly You know, offering to fix the problems that they actually create when they try to solve problems that don't exist. | ||
It's all very well orchestrated. | ||
And people fall for this. | ||
So it's not enough just to laugh at them. | ||
I think it's incumbent on us to try to explain the fundamental fallacies underlying their ridiculous ideas. | ||
But also understand that those who are still adherents to the leftist Democrat Nonsense worldview are only being radicalized even further. | ||
We've got the Tesla attacks. | ||
We've got the swatting attacks. | ||
And we have just basic attacks on people's homes. | ||
We have, of course, administratively discriminating against Trump supporters like we saw with FEMA ignoring houses that had signs that they were Trump supporters. | ||
We've, of course, been targeted by swatting over and over again. | ||
This at least is getting some attention by the FBI. | ||
And the problem is a lot more widespread than you would even believe. | ||
I mean, I knew that there must have been right-wingers that had been swatted but hadn't reported it. | ||
And even just the last 24 hours, I've heard of at least three people who have had multiple swatting attempts against them, never made it public. | ||
Now, the administration or the law enforcement is aware, so all these cases are being tied in and investigated and treated as one campaign of terror. | ||
You know, unless it's like a state actor from a different country, then they're going to be found and rounded up. | ||
But the problem is even bigger and more widespread than we even know, really, because nobody is admitting that they're swatted, which, again, is part of the problem with being swatted is when you say you're swatted, you're confirming things that it's getting to you, | ||
all this sort of stuff. | ||
But there's just like this under, and I don't know, it's like, there's like a frequency that not everybody can hear. | ||
I can hear it. | ||
I hear it loud and clear. | ||
There's this bubbling under the surface tone of chaos. | ||
There's this like disjointed, frenetic buzzing underneath the already frantic exterior of the Democrats of just outright Insane. | ||
Like... I don't even know how to express it. | ||
But these people are like walking time bombs. | ||
And they're ostensibly normal people. | ||
Walking around just seething. | ||
Just boiling in hate. | ||
And it comes out when they see things like a cyber truck. | ||
We have the video we played a second ago. | ||
Clip number two. | ||
This is a guy attacking a cyber truck. | ||
The Cybertruck was in a parade. | ||
And you can see everybody else around him is kind of looking at him. | ||
What are you doing? | ||
Here he comes running up. | ||
He's wearing Mardi Gras beads. | ||
I guess he's there having a good time. | ||
And he's banging on the Cybertruck and attacking it. | ||
And people are just kind of backing away from him. | ||
Like, yeah, get the kids away from this guy. | ||
Yeah, he's insane. | ||
He's a psycho. | ||
He's attacking the car. | ||
He doesn't know who's in the car. | ||
He doesn't really care about the people in the car. | ||
He's attacking the car. | ||
Here comes a more sensible woman with green hair to pull him away as everybody else looks on in confusion at why a man is attacking a piece of machinery like it did him wrong. | ||
He's attacking a car like it insulted his mother. | ||
Very strange. | ||
Very weird. | ||
It's a sign of mental illness, actually. | ||
In any other situation, in any other time of history, When you had a man running out from a crowd of parade to physically attack a car, not the people in the car, by the way, again, the physical car, | ||
like it did something to him, you would put that man in a padded cell for his own protection. | ||
But this is the mindset being inculcated, being developed in the minds of these psychos, these weirdos, these deeply weird people. | ||
Clip number eight is another example. | ||
This is Aspen Wall Police in Pennsylvania. | ||
They're seeking a man who is angrily confronting residents because of pro-Trump messaging at their home. | ||
Here is another middle-aged white dude. | ||
They all seem to be like middle-aged white dudes. | ||
In this case, spitting on the door of a Trump supporter. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
There's a hawking a loogie on the thing and walking away like he did something. | ||
Walking away like a badass. | ||
I just spit on a camera. | ||
Yeah, it's gross. | ||
No, these people are gross, dude. | ||
Like, there's just this disgusting resonance of hatred. | ||
Oh, God, I didn't need to hear it. | ||
Jesus, darn it. | ||
Let's take that off the screen. | ||
That's not even the worst, dude. | ||
That's not even the worst. | ||
There's videos of people, like, smearing their own feces on Tesla trucks. | ||
Owen Schroyer today posted a video of somebody just pulling their pants down, like, rubbing their butts on Tesla. | ||
These people are freaks, dude. | ||
These people are weird freaks. | ||
They're freaky weirdos that are violent. | ||
And, like, you would never know. | ||
You'd see these people in the store, you'd think, there's a boring person. | ||
There's an NPC that was copy and pasted a million times throughout my life. | ||
They probably don't do anything absurd and disgusting, but... | ||
Little do you know, seething in their dark, fetid heart is this violent hatred. | ||
And this was posted by Dash, documenting ATX on X. Things are going to get bad here in Austin. | ||
This was found at a bus stop in South Austin. | ||
It says, which of course means, thus always to tyrants. | ||
It's what John Wilkes Booth. | ||
Said after assassinating Abraham Lincoln, and it's a picture of a guillotine with Trump and Musk, and it's just a flyer, just a little flyer being dropped out. | ||
Six Semper Tyrannus. | ||
Like, are you starting to hear the sound? | ||
Are you starting to hear that buzzing? | ||
Are you starting to feel the kettle start to shake as the water starts to boil over? | ||
There is this substrate of insane weirdos. | ||
Occupying this country. | ||
Yeah, here's the video. | ||
Here's the liberal domestic terrorist champion of democracy spreading his own poop on a cyber truck. | ||
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And it's just like... | |
We should thank God we have been given enemies of such a despicable and degraded nature. | ||
They should be the easiest people in the world to utterly defeat. | ||
We just gotta get on it, we gotta get a move on. | ||
And they are, and more attention is being brought to the domestic terror inclinations | ||
I'll show you that on the other side. | ||
CNN's reporting on it. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, the second hour of American Journal is on this Friday broadcast. | ||
I'm going to open up the phone lines for your calls this hour. | ||
We'll take your calls throughout this and the next hour. | ||
But first, stories of Gateway Pundit shock. | ||
CNN reports in on recent swatting of multiple conservatives and actually does a decent job. | ||
Now, is this part of the attempt of the mainstream media to claw back some of the credibility that they have voluntarily given up over the last decade? | ||
An attempt to stay relevant and existent? | ||
Or is this simply an encouragement to people doing this swatting as they instruct people on how effective this terrorist tactic is? | ||
I'll leave it up to you to decide. | ||
Here's CNN covering the recent swattings against conservatives. | ||
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This morning, a growing number of conservative influencers are getting targeted by swatters. | |
There have been at least a dozen incidents in recent days of bogus calls that draw police and first responders to the target's home, including the home of Erin Durham in North Carolina. | ||
She opened the door late at night to armed officers. | ||
He was pointing a gun at me, you know, and obviously, like, immediately stopped when he saw me. | ||
But it was a lot of confusion, a lot of fear. | ||
I felt like I was going to pass out most of the time that they were in the house. | ||
This is so disturbing. | ||
The FBI and Department of Homeland Security are now investigating these incidents, and CNN Hadassah Gold is joining me now. | ||
She is looking into them as well. | ||
What are you learning? | ||
Who is the target mainly, and how does this all go down? | ||
So what we've seen is over the past two weeks, at least a dozen influencers have been targeted in these swattings. | ||
And not just swattings, they're also getting things like bogus pizza deliveries. | ||
Now, what we found commonality amongst all of these influencers is almost all of them have some sort of following on X. Almost all of them are pro-Trump. | ||
Many of them have interacted with actually Elon Musk, the owner of X. Some of them have millions of followers and are super well-known. | ||
And some of them are some of these more smaller influencers. | ||
But again, almost all of them are pro-Trump. | ||
Trump, many of them call themselves conservatives, and many of them have interacted with Elon Musk. | ||
Now, as you noted, swatting is very dangerous, and it can be deadly. | ||
These callers will call in with bogus calls of people being shot, of a home invasion, of holding people hostage. | ||
It causes a huge response from police and emergency services, which draws them away from other actual emergencies. | ||
But if there's confusion, something could go wrong, and something could go very wrong. | ||
So I actually spoke to two of these influencers. | ||
I spoke to Aaron, who you just heard from. | ||
And to Larry Tonton. | ||
She's in North Carolina. | ||
He's in Alabama. | ||
Both got these swatting calls right around the same time, early Sunday, right around 1 a.m. | ||
Both got bogus calls about that. | ||
They were pretending to be the homeowners saying that they had been shot. | ||
There were other people had been shot. | ||
Caused a big response. | ||
Here's what Larry said he experienced. | ||
Take a listen. | ||
There were no sirens, no lights, no announcement, nothing. | ||
And he's trying the door handle. | ||
And I am crouched inside, armed, and I'm thinking if that man comes through my door, I'm going to light him up. | ||
Because you're just thinking, somebody's here to murder me and my wife. | ||
And what's really notable is a lot of these influencers are armed. | ||
They carry guns. | ||
And so, so many of them are saying this could have turned really bad because I thought somebody was robbing my home. | ||
Aaron called it a cheap form of domestic terrorism. | ||
Now, the FBI and the DHS say that they are investigating this. | ||
The Secretary of Homeland Security is saying that under President Trump's leadership, we will not sit idly by as conservative new media and their families are being targeted by false swatting. | ||
She also said this is an attack on our law enforcement, an innocent... | ||
We'll be prosecuted as such. | ||
But what makes this hard to investigate is the technology that these people use with the swatting. | ||
They spoof their phone numbers. | ||
A lot of them even use artificial intelligence to spoof the voices. | ||
But there have been prosecutions on this, and this is a very dangerous game that people are playing. | ||
It is. | ||
It's really dangerous, and it puts a lot of people in a bad spot. | ||
The police... | ||
And the people who are being swatted. | ||
It's disgusting. | ||
Someone is going to get hurt. | ||
Someone has gotten hurt. | ||
I remember this happening over video games where someone got really hurt. | ||
It's honestly a miracle that nobody has been killed yet. | ||
You know, credit to the police and, you know, the ending of no-knock raids all over the country, which is good. | ||
But it's funny that, I mean, by doing this, the left is really pissing off the police. | ||
And they're also getting the police in personal contact and to have personal relationships with the people who are swatted, which is a great thing for us. | ||
So it's been positive so far. | ||
Welcome back, folks. | ||
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We were talking about the... | |
Insanity of the left. | ||
Basically, it's just basically what we do, because that is what we are at war with, after all. | ||
The chaos that the left-wing creates is a vulnerability that can be exploited by the globalists to implement more and greater changes, more and greater aspects of the Great Reset that itself makes everything even worse. | ||
Meaning they have more opportunities to exploit the misery and chaos that they themselves create. | ||
It's a very efficient business model that they have. | ||
And it's already paying dividends, you could say. | ||
In other words, by treating very extreme mental illness as not just normal, but good and positive and to be celebrated. | ||
They've created this class of people who are... | ||
It's almost like the perfect... | ||
It's almost like the perfect... | ||
They've created leftist super soldiers. | ||
Because what do you have when you have a trans person? | ||
Especially one who's gone all the way. | ||
In terms of medical interventions, hormone therapies, castration, all that sort of stuff. | ||
What you have is somebody who is a genetic dead end. | ||
Who cannot create life or procreate or have any stake in the future. | ||
They recognize that and whether or not they say they care about it. | ||
Subconsciously, something changes in you, I think, when you no longer even have the possibility of spreading on your genes or continuing your spiritual existence into the future through next generations, which is a truly... | ||
Yes, spiritual undertaking. | ||
It's always crazy how much my children look like my grandparents. | ||
You just realize like, wow, you're just like grandpa. | ||
You're just like my grandpa. | ||
So your great-grandfather is somehow still alive in you. | ||
Very powerful. | ||
So you've got people who don't have that, who don't have a connection to that, who will never experience that on purpose, by design. | ||
But they also feel... | ||
Incredibly motivated. | ||
They're also hopped up on a huge number of hormone-altering drugs. | ||
And you're messing with an extremely delicate and naturally well-balanced system. | ||
You're causing imbalance there. | ||
So you're going to be exacerbating some of these inclinations even further. | ||
There's a sexual perversion aspect to it that also contributes to... | ||
Being more willing to engage in clandestine activities when it becomes part of your personality. | ||
So they're radicalized. | ||
They're genetic dead ends. | ||
They're hopped up on a variety of hormone-altering drugs. | ||
They are also told that they are victims who are subjects of a genocide because we won't let pornography be shown in elementary schools. | ||
That, in their mind, becomes a holocaust against them. | ||
So you have these radicalized, insane people, and not all trans, you know, they're trans people that listen to this show. | ||
Trans people that, you know, before all of this chaos came about, and all of this, you know, the deliberate manufacturing of this mindset and this swath of people, you know, I can sympathize, I can understand how you might have some body dysmorphia. | ||
Or just feel more like yourself when dressed as the other gender. | ||
It's like... | ||
But we can't, you know, but we saw what happened when we tolerated that. | ||
You get to the next step and you get to the next step and suddenly we're here. | ||
Suddenly here we are. | ||
So no offense. | ||
No offense meant people who are actually dealing with a mental illness in a legitimate way. | ||
But that's not really what we're dealing with here. | ||
We're dealing with a... | ||
Psychopolitical phenomenon that's going on. | ||
There's a reason that there's not a huge number of transgender conservatives because there's something about this mental illness that's not entirely natural, not entirely organic and coincides or correlates with extremist Materialistic views. | ||
And the violence. | ||
And also there's the violence. | ||
And I didn't find it this morning. | ||
I bookmarked it and just haven't uncovered it yet in my bookmarks. | ||
But I think Elon Musk posted a chart showing transviolence in the last few days. | ||
And I've talked about it before where, you know, if you look at rates of rape amongst the male population, it's like 3 out of 100,000 or something. | ||
Three out of a thousand sounds high. | ||
But it's something, you know, it's some number. | ||
It's not great, but sort of understandable. | ||
With women, it's like, you know, a fraction of that. | ||
And then with transgender people, it's like ten times that rate. | ||
The number, when it comes to sexual violence in prisons, the transgender people are way, way, way overrepresented. | ||
So there's something to this that can't be ignored. | ||
Trust the science. | ||
There's something off and often violent about transgenderism. | ||
I'm going to try to find this thing. | ||
Because not only are we seeing it on sort of the individual level, after all you have this from the Daily Caller, three of four... | ||
of the alleged Tesla facility and charger vandals appear to identify as transgender or non-binary. | ||
So it exists on the individual level, but then you look at the statistics and it's horrifying. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
So, yeah, apparently three out of four of the perpetrators, alleged perpetrators, caught vandalizing Tesla dealerships or charging stations. | ||
Three out of four of them. | ||
Use she, they pronouns. | ||
They're transgender. | ||
And then you have rates of sexual offending here. | ||
Thank you, the crew, pulling this up. | ||
The numbers are a little small for me to be able to see. | ||
So on top you have women, rates of sexual offending, and there's three little humans, three little people. | ||
With men, there's obviously a much, much larger selection and contingent. | ||
So incarcerated sexual offenders, 103 out of 30 million women. | ||
So that's three per million. | ||
Out of men, it gets up to 395 per million. | ||
Pretty high. | ||
But men who identify as women, 1,916 per million. | ||
This is from January 2023. | ||
This is data from His Majesty's Prison Service data. | ||
So this is UK data. | ||
Showing that amongst men, the rate is 395 per million. | ||
And amongst transgender women, men who dress up like women, it gets up to nearly 2,000 per million. | ||
At least six times as many. | ||
Or around six times as many. | ||
Now, as a man, I can acknowledge and recognize that there's a vast difference between men and women when it comes to sexual abuse. | ||
Or some other crime of sexual nature. | ||
Can we also acknowledge the difference between men and transgender women? | ||
And it's also, I mean, the funny part is that they want you to think that transgender women are women. | ||
That's really the funniest part, is like not only are they massively overrepresented when compared to men, But we're supposed to think that that population is actually women. | ||
So the correct comparison wouldn't even be between men and men who think they're women. | ||
It should be between transgender women and real women. | ||
And in that case, you go from 3 out of a million to 2,000 out of a million. | ||
So I don't think they're really women. | ||
I don't think they're really women. | ||
I mean... | ||
Ostensibly, if there was any legitimacy to the transgender argument at all, you would think that the people who are actually women inside would have a rate of sexual assault more like women than men. | ||
But no, you have it many, many times more than men, which itself is many, many, many times more than women. | ||
Which means they aren't in fact women, they are in fact... | ||
Men with a proclivity towards sexual violence. | ||
Just so you know. | ||
And again, there is something... | ||
Again, I don't want to just make fun of people who have mental illness. | ||
As much as, you know... | ||
I feel like we need to be harsh about where we are as a nation and a world at this point. | ||
After all, that was UK data. | ||
I'm sure American data is probably worse, if anything. | ||
So we have to just talk frankly about this stuff and be honest about it. | ||
At the same time, it's not my goal to offend. | ||
It's not the point of what I'm saying to try to mock or get a rise out of people I don't like. | ||
I don't have any personal opinion about how you care to dress or present yourself or your sexual proclivity. | ||
What I'm saying is that this isn't a mental illness as such. | ||
It's not something like schizophrenia. | ||
It's not something... | ||
Like depression or anxiety, which itself can be exacerbated and brought about by environmental aspects, like obviously. | ||
But there are mental illnesses that are just like your brain doesn't work. | ||
We don't know how to explain it. | ||
We don't exactly understand the function of the brain in totality. | ||
But some people are insane. | ||
Some people are crazy. | ||
Some people see things they shouldn't see. | ||
Some people have their wires crossed to the degree that they see orange when they, you know, smell tea. | ||
You know, the brain can be messed up. | ||
It can be... | ||
That's not what this is. | ||
This is a political movement. | ||
This is a socio-psychological political movement. | ||
Transgenderism. And it's being seen in the fact that a huge number, I mean when you think about how vanishingly small the population of trans people actually is. | ||
Less than a percentage of the population. | ||
How is it that like half Of the big major mass casualty or terroristic events in the last couple of years have had trans perpetrators. | ||
From school shootings, to mall shootings, to assassination attempts, to the Tesla attacks. | ||
Why are trans people, less than 1% of the population, so massively overrepresented in crime statistics? | ||
And could it have something to do... | ||
With the combination of mental illness and progressive, that is, i.e. | ||
anti-human, psychotic policies. | ||
Trans Tesla Vandal, who allegedly threw Molotov cocktails at cars, lives with mom and calls herself baby. | ||
You can't send me to prison. | ||
I'm a baby. | ||
I'm just an innocent baby. | ||
Lucy Grace Nelson. | ||
Also known as Justin Thomas Nelson. | ||
Accused of hurling incendiary devices at a Tesla dealership in Loveland, Northern Colorado and vandalizing the business and vehicles on multiple occasions with graffiti offensive and hateful in nature, police said. | ||
Well, he's just a baby. | ||
What do you expect? | ||
This grown man is just a baby girl. | ||
How can you be so mean? | ||
They got him. | ||
Teslas have cameras, people. | ||
You will not get... | ||
Away with damaging one. | ||
Here's Aaron L. White. | ||
Is that a transgender person? | ||
I don't even know. | ||
I don't want to be offensive. | ||
That one is, though. | ||
I don't need confirmation for that one, though. | ||
This was one who shot up and Molotov cocktailed the Salem organ dealership. | ||
Hmm, why do they all seem to have something in common? | ||
I wonder. | ||
Gee, I wonder. | ||
And here's another one. | ||
Trans activist Adam Lansky faces 20 years in prison for firebombing a Tesla in Oregon. | ||
Another... Well, look. | ||
He's either an insane man that dresses up like a woman or he's a rock star from the 70s. | ||
That's what I'm getting from this picture. | ||
Because he doesn't look like a woman. | ||
He looks like a flamboyant man. | ||
But I guess that's a she-they. | ||
One of the she-they's that is now... | ||
Firebombing Tesla dealerships. | ||
Because of course they are. | ||
Because of course they are. | ||
So this is what I mean. | ||
It's like you have... | ||
You have this population in America. | ||
And it's just... | ||
The more you think about it, the more it just hits you how dystopian and hellish our modern world is and how anybody from the 50s coming forward. | ||
I mean, if you showed somebody from the 50s one broadcast of American Journal or the Alex Jones Show, they would just kill themselves. | ||
They would just immediately put a gun in their mouths and pull the trigger because what the hell is going on here? | ||
You've got transgender terrorists firebombing Teslas. | ||
The mayor of Boston being like, everyone's an American. | ||
Everyone is. | ||
You've got judges stopping the president from removing transgender people from women's prisons, men from women's prisons. | ||
You've got infinite homeless people just multiplying on the streets, just zonked out on the most highly manufactured weapons-grade hallucinogens. | ||
On a daily basis, attacking cops 26 times and being released every single time to go out on the street and just do it again. | ||
Like, you get that we are in a state of continual collapse. | ||
And this is what the collapse looks like. | ||
For a long time, preppers were preparing for some major event, some singular instance in which one day life is normal and the next it's World War Z. Power grid down, chaos in the streets, roving gangs of marauders. | ||
Like, that was never how the collapse was going to be because the collapse was always to be engineered. | ||
And the people engineering the collapse are trying to ride the wave of the building they're demolishing underneath them. | ||
They don't want to go down with it. | ||
They want to rule over the ashes once it's gone. | ||
collapse was always going to look more like a... | ||
South Africa than the fall of the Soviet Union. | ||
It was always going to look more like the slow, continual degradation of our capabilities, of the intelligence and knowledge needed to uphold complex systems, whether that's infrastructure or bureaucracy. | ||
This was always the design. | ||
This was always going to be how it was. | ||
From transgenderism to just the continual rise of crime to the collapsing infrastructure. | ||
And you've got flyers being found at bus stops in Austin saying to kill Trump and Elon. | ||
You have prominent left-wingers like Rick Wilson being kicked off of X for writing articles about how to kill Tesla to stop Elon calling for violence in the... | ||
Most transparent but roundabout way. | ||
You've got late night comedy hosts joking about this. | ||
It's all very funny. | ||
And then you have these asinine and just baffling comparisons to | ||
like conservatives boycotting Bud Light. | ||
unidentified
|
you. | |
And in a way, we are the least capable of understanding what's going on because we're in it. | ||
But you can do it. | ||
You can just imagine what it would be like in a world where this stuff didn't exist. | ||
Some of you don't have to imagine. | ||
If you're about three years older than me, you were alive during the time of normalcy. | ||
But if you just compare where we are now and just really see it from an objective point of view, the entire apparatus of the United States is... | ||
Has this foundation that has just been hollowed out and is getting worse. | ||
Like we're just, our house is filled with termites and they're just undermining and destroying the floorboards. | ||
And soon the whole facade will collapse if we don't deal with them. | ||
And we do have to deal with them. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
So again, I don't know, you know. | ||
I don't know how to express it to other people. | ||
All I know is that when I scroll Twitter and I see swattings and Tesla attacks and violence across the board and criminals with rap sheets a mile long being let out again for yet another violent, drug-addled attack. | ||
When I see flyers saying to kill Trump and graffiti saying to kill Trump and Elon and the Democrats doubling down on their socialistic tendencies. | ||
I just, I feel the earthquake coming. | ||
I feel the chaos rising and the insanity spreading. | ||
And while Trump is doing a ton of great stuff, honestly, and we'll get to some of that, I know, like, long term, the Department of Education has had a lot to do with, like, the way that schools teach this stuff, | ||
which... These are the seeds that are planted that are now coming to bloom, and we see what the effects of this is. | ||
So long-term, doing things like dismantling the Department of Education, which has been such a font of this stuff, is a good thing. | ||
I personally would like to see a more concerted effort to reopen asylums or something, because we've got to do something about this. | ||
Or just reimagining... | ||
The prison system as a whole. | ||
It's one of the things that, just like Black Lives Matter, how we talked about yesterday or the day before, where I was showing these documents about the orchestrating of the Freddie Gray riots in Baltimore. | ||
And I talked about the fact that for a long time, it was libertarians that were calling out police violence and police brutality. | ||
And it was almost like the awareness of police violence brutality was rising and rising and rising. | ||
And when it was right at the tipping point, we're like, hey, we can get something done about this. | ||
In came the race baiters to say, actually, this is a black and white thing. | ||
Now you have to be enemies with each other. | ||
And now you're on the side of the police all of a sudden. | ||
And it all got topsy-turvy and ridiculous and outrageous. | ||
And similar things are going on sort of across the board where... | ||
If we don't deal with this, they will. | ||
Where, like, there is... | ||
Conservatives have a problem with, like... | ||
And liberals do, too. | ||
We read the statement from the guy talking about how, as a liberal, he just believed that all of these bureaucratic outlets of his ideology is like, these are good. | ||
These are absolute good. | ||
And if you don't like them, you're either stupid or evil because you're against these obviously good programs like the Department of... | ||
You know, conservatives do that a little bit too, where socialists come out and say, the police are corrupt, the prison system's for profit, you know, and this is bad. | ||
And conservatives then have a reaction of just like, ah, shut up. | ||
It's working fine. | ||
We just need to throw more people in prison. | ||
And it's like, actually, the prison system is a horror show. | ||
It's horrific. | ||
It's awful. | ||
It doesn't work. | ||
Constant, you know, readmittance, people getting out and going right back in. | ||
It doesn't do anything. | ||
I mean... | ||
The whole system, our prison system is set up by the Amish. | ||
It's like this old thing. | ||
The reason they're called penitentiaries is because the idea was that you would send somebody to prison and they would have time to be penitent. | ||
They would have time to regret and think about their sins and come closer to God. | ||
It's this idea and now we're just like into the rape dungeon with you and you just get abused by the gangs in there for a couple years and come out worse off than you were when you started. | ||
So the whole thing's messed up. | ||
Why don't we... | ||
Why don't we work on that? | ||
Why don't we try to come up with, like, different systems to actually rehabilitate people in some way? | ||
What if prisons were instead, like, little enclosed towns where people could, like, have jobs and learn to reintegrate back into society, and we could send trans people there, and we could give them psychological care, like an institution? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Something. We gotta do something. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, welcome back, folks. | |
Still lost a lot to talk about. | ||
I do want to take your calls this show. | ||
I'm going to go ahead and open up the phone lines for your calls now. | ||
The number to dial, 1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
Phone lines now open on American Journal. | ||
Give us a call about the news of the day, your thoughts or strategies or whatever. | ||
Open line Friday, 1-877-789-2539. | ||
We're going to move on from the... | ||
Chaos and terror of the left. | ||
And let's talk a little bit about one of the biggest stories of the day from Infowars.com. | ||
Trump shutters Department of Education. | ||
President Donald Trump has signed an executive order to begin eliminating the Federal Department of Education once and for all. | ||
The Department of Education has become a bloated bureaucracy that's more interested in pushing its own agenda than in helping our kids learn. | ||
It's time to put the power back in the hands of parents, teachers, and local communities, the president said, which is, I repeat myself, the correct framing. | ||
That is the correct framing. | ||
In other words, just saying you're eliminating the Department of Education sounds very bad, but it's a lot more digestible when you say, no, we're just sending it back to the states. | ||
The states will now be in charge of their own education, and they will not have to deal with the... | ||
Interminable meddling of the federal government in educating their children. | ||
And closer to the individual citizen, the power structure is, the better it is in general. | ||
So, I'm in favor of this, and it looks like they're doing it in an intelligent way, not just slamming the door shut and closing it down, but dismantling it. | ||
I saw somebody post this video saying, we got some, let's see, Adam Sandler movie. | ||
It looks like Trump is going back to elementary school. | ||
He's sitting with a bunch of elementary schoolers. | ||
Yeah, it's a Billy Madison situation we have here. | ||
Trump, very funny optics, but good optics. | ||
Again, pointing out that this is actually for the benefit of the students. | ||
This will actually be better for them in the long run. | ||
And all you have to do to understand that is look at the record of achievement the Department of Education has had since it's... | ||
Inauguration in the 70s. | ||
It's been a litany of failure, a continual drain on resources and capabilities that has achieved absolutely nothing. | ||
To the point that it's like, what do you have to lose? | ||
What could be worse than what we're doing now? | ||
When the policy is achieving the opposite of what it's designed, just get rid of the policy. | ||
It's not that... | ||
Now, this is, of course, infuriating, pissing off, and terrifying the left. | ||
And they don't really know how to argue against it, so they're doing what they always do. | ||
Their behavior is so predictable. | ||
I know it's the NPC meme, and they do the same thing over and over. | ||
It's one of the struggles of this job. | ||
At a certain point, when you study this stuff enough, when you look at this stuff day in and day out, You can just predict what they're going to do perfectly. | ||
Like, if I asked you, you know, what is the tack they're taking in their argument in favor of retaining the Department of Education, would you be shocked in the slightest if I told you that they're calling it racist? | ||
I mean, is that a shock to anybody? | ||
These people are so predictable. | ||
They have like three tricks. | ||
And two of them don't work anymore, so it's just still just racism and anti-Semitism. | ||
Like, that's all they have, although they're not even doing the anti-Semitism or anything anymore because they're all Palestinian supporters. | ||
So, yeah, it's just racism now. | ||
They stopped trying to do the sexism thing because, you know, those lies could only persist for so long before everybody got sick of hearing them. | ||
Lies about, you know, the wage gap and discrimination, like all this nonsense that was never true in the first place. | ||
They don't even worry about it anymore. | ||
They don't even make those arguments. | ||
But they are calling it racist because that's all they have. | ||
And I'd like to say something again to people that are perhaps older than me, like Tim Waltz, about segregation in schools. | ||
Because that's what Tim Waltz thinks is happening with the Department of Education. | ||
And I'm going to have to explain again, as having gone to public school, Within the last 20 years. | ||
Schools are still segregated. | ||
Almost perfectly. | ||
Like very little overlap. | ||
And that's... | ||
Let's watch the video and then we'll get into segregation as a whole. | ||
Clip number 11, Tim Waltz. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
And he's surrounding by people who know nothing about education, and they want to make this about bureaucracy and cutting. | |
This is about children. | ||
This is about broadband access in their schools. | ||
This is about the research you were talking about, pedagogy, things that we learn. | ||
And then it's about the Civil Rights Department at the Department of Education that makes sure that we don't have a situation where a Ruby Bridges is escorted to school with police. | ||
And so we're back in an area where we can segregate. | ||
And he knows that curriculums and those decisions are made on a local basis, but they muddy the waters. | ||
Oh, they're trying to re-segregate. | ||
You're gonna have little black girls being escorted to school by police. | ||
You ever been to an inner city school, Tim? | ||
Do you have any idea how many police are required to keep a handle on the children these days? | ||
What would we pay for the throwback of the only time police are involved in education is when trying to forcibly segregate schools against the will of the students and the parents there? | ||
That was a... | ||
It was a much better time, let's just say, because little black girls are still escorted by police into school. | ||
It's just they have to go through a metal detector because of all the gang activity in the schools. | ||
It's not exactly as romantic, I guess. | ||
Wouldn't make quite as moving of a Norman Rockwell painting, but that's where we are. | ||
As far as I can tell, segregation has been a disaster. | ||
Desegregation has been a disaster. | ||
It has not been effective. | ||
It has not... | ||
Made us equal in any remote interpretation. | ||
It hasn't happened. | ||
And I know for a fact that schools are, for all intents and purposes, completely segregated at this point. | ||
Public schools, school I went to in Houston, I've said it a million times, in the gifted and talented classes, it was all white people and Asian people, and like one black guy. | ||
And then in the regular classes, it was all black people. | ||
And me. | ||
All black people and me. | ||
The one token white guy. | ||
There. Is that non-segregation? | ||
I mean, it's not... | ||
It doesn't say it's about race. | ||
It doesn't say it's separated by race. | ||
But if that's the function of your system, then you're still segregated. | ||
It's just the difference is, instead of having an administration concerned exclusively with the black students and providing them what they need, instead you have a single administration with the white students who get all the priority. | ||
Obviously, because they're the ones that win the awards. | ||
They're the ones, you know, the GT, the Gifted and Talented, the International Baccalaureate students. | ||
They're the ones that get all the attention and the good teachers and the, you know, everything. | ||
And the black students are like basically babysat for all day and achieve nothing and get an A and graduate without being able to read. | ||
So is this a good thing? | ||
Is this a positive thing? | ||
I don't think it is. | ||
I'm not in favor of resegregation. | ||
I think that's an obvious non-starter for... | ||
Any number of reasons. | ||
But at the end of the day, it's just funny to me. | ||
He's like, he's going to segregate schools. | ||
First of all, what a ridiculous, fear-mongering nonsense. | ||
Just like when they're like, he's going to put black people back in the fields, like Jasmine Crockett says. | ||
Just like... | ||
People were offended at my comment on that. | ||
Because I said, Jasmine Crockett said, Trump's going to put us all back in the fields like in slavery days. | ||
And my response to that was, who would trust Jasmine Crockett in a field alone with valuable cotton? | ||
In other words, she's going to steal it. | ||
In other words, she's not trustworthy enough to pick cotton, yet she's a congresswoman? | ||
This is a problem. | ||
Which I think, again, is... | ||
Maybe it is a little offensive. | ||
I don't think it is, though. | ||
I think it's funny. | ||
I think it's funny because it's like saying, you know... | ||
They aren't even qualified to be a dog walker. | ||
They aren't qualified to be the dog catcher around here. | ||
But it's Jasmine Crockett. | ||
She's not even qualified enough to pick cotton. | ||
Because it's a ridiculous thing for them to say. | ||
It's a ridiculous race-baiting, blood libel nonsense that they're spewing to try to emotionally entrap black people into supporting their asinine and destructive policies. | ||
Sorry. So sorry it's offensive, but these people are evil and have to be confronted. | ||
And so whether they're talking about segregation or bringing back slavery, it's all just cynical, emotional manipulation from people who have nothing else and can achieve nothing else and simply want to continue and expand their bureaucratic control of the utter failure of American public schools. | ||
And you can, I mean, the statistics on this are pretty shocking. | ||
The amount of illiteracy, the amount of people that are graduated from high school in this country incapable of reading at a sixth grade level is pretty troubling. | ||
And yet it's these systems that the Democrats are just sacrificing everything to try to retain and continue. | ||
I thought maybe I'd printed out one of the... | ||
One of the statistics that people are posting these days. | ||
Yeah, here it is from Libs of TikTok. | ||
Of course it was the last one in the stack. | ||
From Libs of TikTok, not a single student can read at grade level in 30 Illinois schools. | ||
30 Illinois schools, not a single student reading at grade level. | ||
Not a single one. | ||
So like what? | ||
Is it going to be worse without the Department of Education? | ||
Is that even possible? | ||
It's totally insane. | ||
And of course it has to do with the drive for equality as well. | ||
That's why you have things like Harvard stopped taking SAT scores into account when finding candidates for their school, which of course was a diversity drive because white and Asian people score much higher on SATs than... | ||
Non-white and non-Asian kids. | ||
And so that, of course, has to be discrimination because if there's ever a difference between races, that is de facto, therefore, racism. | ||
That's the mindset of the left, right? | ||
If there's a difference, it has to be racism. | ||
If there's a difference in crime rates, that's because the police are racist. | ||
If there's a difference in academic achievement, that's because the test is racist. | ||
So they get rid of the test. | ||
Now, Harvard, premier university in America, And really the world, right? | ||
The Ivy League, I mean, for a while there, America, American universities, envy of the world. | ||
Best in the world, bar none. | ||
You look at the top universities in the world, America occupies the vast majority of them. | ||
It's really something we should have been proud of and tried to continue. | ||
But instead, we decided to look at the racial composition of the student body and decided that standards were too much of a barrier to our... | ||
Desired utopian vision of perfect racial equality. | ||
So therefore, your school standards had to be dropped. | ||
And now they're offering remedial math class. | ||
Harvard University now offers a remedial algebra class teaching Harvard students what I learned in 8th grade. | ||
So, just general degradation overall, but also degradation of accomplishment. | ||
And it's one of the things I genuinely don't understand how leftists can't get this. | ||
Harvard launches new remedial math course. | ||
If you tell me, hey, black kids are falling behind white kids in academic achievement. | ||
I'm concerned at that. | ||
I don't like that. | ||
These are my fellow Americans. | ||
I want to live amongst people that are intelligent, well-read, and thoughtful, and educated. | ||
Of course, who doesn't? | ||
And there's a population that's falling behind. | ||
I think we should do something about that. | ||
I think what we should do is try to bring their achievement up somehow. | ||
Now, we can argue about what that process looks like, whether more resources are necessary, whether it's the parents that need to be given help or trained in a way to be more active in their kids' lives. | ||
It's the fatherless homes that are the root of the problem. | ||
There's lots of ways you can approach this. | ||
The one thing that would never make any sense... | ||
Would be to say, let's just stop testing them. | ||
Let's just stop determining academic achievement, and then it will all look even. | ||
Like, that's so insane. | ||
Or, you know, the lowest common denominator style. | ||
Like, let's discriminate against white people to bring them down to black people, because if the problem is inequality, then you're not really trying to raise black people. | ||
You're just trying to get some sort of equilibrium. | ||
The easiest way to do that, it's way easier to bring down high achievers than it is to bring up low achievers, right? | ||
Just bringing up low achievers is the correct response and should be the obvious desire of anybody who's concerned about these sorts of things. | ||
Instead, they've decided that we should stop testing. | ||
Stop giving tests because tests show achievement. | ||
And if we just ignore it, then it will all go away. | ||
Very frustrating stuff. | ||
So it is just one of those things that I genuinely don't understand. | ||
Where it's like, I can see the difference and I can say that's a bad thing. | ||
But I can't follow the train of thought that leads to, let's stop testing, let's get rid of SAT scores, let's give every black kid a passing grade, so it looks like they've achieved as much as white people. | ||
It's like, no, I want them to actually achieve more than they are, not just look like it. | ||
What the hell are you talking about? | ||
But that's the way that our education system is set up and has been infiltrated and is basically the... | ||
The outcome of the Department of Education and all of these programs has been a total destruction of our academic achievement, and it should be destroyed. | ||
And if it needs to, then we can rebuild it from the ground up, but it could probably just stay destroyed at the end of the day. | ||
Now, Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump should be delivering a press conference in a little bit about a new fighter jet. | ||
I guess it's being unveiled. | ||
I just saw Bart from Texas just called in about, oh, that's about fighter pilots. | ||
I was talking about yesterday. | ||
Well, whatever. | ||
Bart, thanks for calling in. | ||
You're on the air, or you will be in a moment. | ||
I think you're still maybe still on the line with the screener. | ||
Sorry, Bart just called in. | ||
I'll get to everybody. | ||
But, Bart, I just saw fighter jet, or fighter pilot, and we are waiting on an announcement from PTEXF and Trump about a fighter jet. | ||
But go ahead, Bart. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it's Mark. | |
Hey. You ain't one. | ||
So don't overgeneralize on how they behave because the simple fact of the matter is I got a great joke for you to counter that. | ||
You want to hear it? | ||
So what you're talking about is yesterday I was talking about how different people react differently to things and I was saying I can't remember what I was comparing it to but I was saying fighter pilots typically there's like a type of people that when they're under stressful intense situations their heartbeat doesn't raise their cortisol doesn't spike they just like Yeah, | ||
unidentified
|
it really is. | |
And because you ain't one, guess what? | ||
What? That's pretty good. | ||
That's pretty funny. | ||
No, I mean, but it is a characteristic, right? | ||
It's like the best fighter pilots all have that ability. | ||
Or otherwise they wouldn't be able to handle the situations, right? | ||
unidentified
|
The best liars have it too, right? | |
True, yes. | ||
Yeah, so guess what? | ||
Absolutely. Unfortunately, what you set yourself up for is failure because I'm one of those long time ago in a galaxy, far, far away guys, who's extremely agitated when I'm doing that kind of stuff, | ||
or at least I used to be back when I ruled the world. | ||
And I can tell you there's all kinds of characters. | ||
And, yeah, the selection process may tend to look at that nowadays, but you've got to understand that's a behavioral modification program. | ||
They're looking for what they want so that they will do what? | ||
What they're told. | ||
It's kind of like having a Son of Sam switch that they can flip on. | ||
So you've got to be careful about that kind of stuff. | ||
You can also train it, right? | ||
Some people are naturally inclined that way and can train it to get even better. | ||
Some people aren't inclined that way but can train themselves to... | ||
I can't remember why I was bringing it up, though, but I was bringing it up because just in terms of the differences of individuals and how they respond to certain situations, and I can't remember why I was referencing it, but I wasn't even really talking about fighter pilots. | ||
Whatever we were talking about made me think of the James Cameron submarine documentary where he shows that exact type of calm under fire, calm under intense situations. | ||
And I can't even remember what I was comparing it to, but yes, I understand. | ||
Fighter pilots are all individuals, and they're all very different. | ||
That's very true. | ||
Final thoughts, Bart, before I move on to another caller? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so in terms of wisdom and discernment, you know where that comes from, right? | |
You tell me. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, it's called the fear of the Lord. | |
You're a born-again Christian. | ||
You understand that too, right? | ||
I don't know if I call myself. | ||
I've always been Christian, but yeah, absolutely. | ||
You know, your point about the liars is good, too. | ||
Was that what I was talking about? | ||
Where, like, you know, I think that was what I was talking about, right? | ||
Is that you'll see people who are, you know, congenital liars or whatever the term is, and they just lie and it doesn't even affect them at all. | ||
Like, when normal people lie, you get spikes of chemicals in your brain that make you nervous and that's why you can have, like, body language readers who, like, you start fidgeting. | ||
You know, subconsciously when you're lying and stuff like that. | ||
But people who lie all the time, they do it like we breathe. | ||
I mean, it's as simple as anything. | ||
Thank you for the call, Bart. | ||
Let's go to Clown Car. | ||
Clown Car in New York. | ||
Thanks so much for calling in. | ||
Honk, honk, sir. | ||
You've called in about Tim Waltz. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Reporting for duty, sir. | |
I wanted to say, yeah, Tim Waltz kind of reminds me of like a failed comic. | ||
Because he's a failed governor? | ||
unidentified
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Oh, same situation. | |
Failed coach, failed governor. | ||
It's the punchline that he gives. | ||
He sits and he waits. | ||
That's the same stand-up comic move. | ||
Waiting for the laughter. | ||
That's funny. | ||
We've had a couple videos of Tim Walz recently saying pretty outrageous stuff. | ||
He does kind of have that cadence. | ||
Because he's talking to Pavlovian-trained And also, | ||
unidentified
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I wanted to bring up about Trump getting rid of the educational system here. | |
I mean, could illiteracy get any worse? | ||
Exactly. But what do you think? | ||
How do you think it's going to go? | ||
unidentified
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Well, I think they're going to do homeschooling, and since nobody's home, they're not going to get schooled. | |
Well, that could be the case. | ||
I would like to see voucher programs happen a little bit more. | ||
And again, you've seen the charts that show the increase of the student population, and it's like a moderate rise, and then the increase of the administration is straight up. | ||
So like... | ||
All of the money we pour into education just goes right into the pockets of bureaucrats that don't actually help the children at all. | ||
It's not going to the teachers. | ||
It's not going to the classrooms. | ||
It's going to this massive superstructure of bureaucracy that's over the education and does nothing but hamper and destroy it. | ||
So yeah, you're exactly right. | ||
Thanks so much for the call, Clown Car. | ||
Let's go to Joshua in Georgia. | ||
It has an interesting theory, I think. | ||
Go ahead, Joshua. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
Hey, good morning, Harrison. | ||
How are you today, sir? | ||
Quite well, sir. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
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Got to think I'm right into the danger zone. | |
Anyway, so I've got a, I guess, a good theory on why, quote, leftists are going so insane. | ||
I think that it, I'll give you the catalyst and I'll give you three theories like after effects. | ||
One physiological, one technical, one spiritual. | ||
But I think if you take a graph and you take one line being how many booster shots you've gotten, and then one line being how crazy you are, like these TikTok idiots, I think that the lines will be parallel straight up 60 degrees, | ||
right? Right. | ||
So I think that the shots are doing that. | ||
And first, the physiological. | ||
You got the... | ||
The clots that were found early on that killed people, right? | ||
Not blood clots, just weird calamari clots. | ||
I think those were failures because I think that, you know, obviously all the shots were all experimental batches. | ||
Hey, Joshua, we got one minute left in this second before we go to break. | ||
Break it down for me, these three things. | ||
It's going to take a minute longer than that, okay? | ||
So I think the ones that succeeded are actual brain viruses. | ||
And are affecting them. | ||
Number two, you've got the nanotech building chips and maybe 5G, if you've ever seen the movie Gamer, that kind of thing. | ||
But then the third thing, these are mRNA shots, messenger RNA, right? | ||
And messenger is loosely the English translation from the Latin word for angel. | ||
So you've got angel RNA. | ||
Could it be fallen angel RNA? | ||
And are these people being infected? | ||
Like Jesus said, when the Son of Man returns, it will be as it was in the days. | ||
It's definitely a spiritual attack. | ||
We'll be right back, folks. | ||
Stay with us. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
We will go out to your phone calls again this third and final hour of our broadcast. | ||
But I want to go to a video now of Ann VanderSteel. | ||
She's talking about the documents that we released first probably seven years ago. | ||
Then I did another big breakdown of them, the Friends of Democracy documents describing exactly how Antifa coordinates with local law enforcement and the media and the tax man to carry out violent revolt against the American authorities, | ||
despite it being orchestrated by the authorities themselves. | ||
And I'm just very happy to see that this information is spreading. | ||
And of course, you can help us in this by... | ||
Following on X and sharing these links to everybody you know. | ||
The more it gets picked up, the more people know, the more we can do about it. | ||
Here's Ann Vanderstiel covering those same documents yesterday. | ||
unidentified
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Holy crap, has it been a day. | |
Hold on, because I got a text message from a friend who is part of a special operations unit. | ||
We'll say in the mountains, somewhere on the southeast, because I don't want to give away his identity, but he shared with me paperwork that could only have come from Antifa. | ||
And I'm going to put it up on the screen here, because you have to see what these diabolical freaking assholes are doing. | ||
Sorry to swear, but this is just over the top, and the IRS is in on it. | ||
So hang on, let me just pull this up right here so that you all can see it. | ||
It's beyond shocking. | ||
But hey, you know, this is... | ||
Your government, the agencies that I've been telling you forever are unconstitutional and corrupt. | ||
That's right. | ||
Take a look at this paper right here. | ||
So the first piece of paper is a document that is talking about a debrief occurring with their AOEC representatives at ActPoint Gamma Prime. | ||
And they say do not demobilize until instructed by an agitate org or, sorry, or hire via and they have code words 328BG as reiterated in earlier portions of this document. | ||
You may not under any circumstances deviate from the practices enumerated in this section. | ||
And they're talking about point of contact being a guy named D.A. Donnelly. | ||
Let's put that on blast, shall we? | ||
Do not name this individual in any comms or in person. | ||
This does not leave this document. | ||
Hand to hand, they're talking about... | ||
Engaging with, I guess, an enemy of some kind. | ||
Closed fists may be used only below the neck and above the belt. | ||
Open hands may be used wherever. | ||
Kicking's not permitted. | ||
They're talking about general behavior. | ||
Don't congregate with other ops or O-ops in groups of more than two. | ||
Don't make prolonged eye contact or speak with more than two other ops or O-ops. | ||
If you must, OGS OPS, I say, if you must speak with other ops and OGS OPS directly, please do so via 328B. | ||
When not in crowds, keep the hands out of pockets and keep them visible. | ||
So you're looking at this. | ||
It's been signed off. | ||
There's names on here. | ||
I can't actually read them, but it was signed off back in April 2016. | ||
They have another document here that when you look at this one, this one blows my mind because it says right on here, it talks about disbursement of funds will occur in three stages. | ||
The initial disbursement is about 5 to 10 percent of the negotiated amount. | ||
Then following the debrief, the AOEC rep will direct you on where you can expect to see the next stage, which will happen at typically 24 to 48 hours, following any action of 20 to 30 percent of the negotiated amount, and the final disbursement will come at some point in the future. | ||
A timeline to be determined by the AOEC representatives, your contact, and possible amendments to AOEC adjutords. | ||
Pretty amazing because they're telling you right here, look at this, do not report this as income to anybody. | ||
We have coordinated with relevant tax authorities and accounting firms to ensure that funding is distributed through appropriate channels to preserve OPSEC. | ||
What? What are you talking about? | ||
Yeah, to preserve OPSEC. | ||
And then lastly, we've got this entire thing all put together. | ||
Guys, I don't know what to tell you, but we're talking about Antifa coordinating with tax authorities. | ||
Well, who are the tax authorities? | ||
The Internal Revenue Service. | ||
Is there any wonder why Trump is now holding back on taxing on tips and Social Security? | ||
Don't you think it's time to abolish that criminal organization, the Infernal Revenue Service? | ||
Fighting organized crime? | ||
Yeah, there you go. | ||
So here you are, folks. | ||
This is looking like some Antifa agitator paperwork. | ||
So there's Ann VanderSteel covering the documents that we first uncovered at Infowars, the Prince of Democracy documents. | ||
Share our links, won't you? | ||
All right, folks, welcome back. | ||
Third hour of American Journal is on. | ||
We still have a lot to talk about, and I do want to go out to your calls mostly this hour. | ||
We're also waiting on... | ||
A live press conference from Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump, so we'll be going to that if it begins in the next hour, which they always run a little bit late, but we'll keep an eye out. | ||
Now, here's a story that I think I can add some more context to. | ||
From Reuters, global flight turmoil as London's Heathrow closed by huge fire. | ||
Heathrow Airport to be closed all of Friday. | ||
Flight's been diverted around the world. | ||
The fire... | ||
At a substation, an electrical substation is now out. | ||
Industry and experts are asking how this ever could have happened. | ||
Police say there are no signs of foul play, but counterterrorism officials have been deployed. | ||
So it was shut on Friday, Britain's Heathrow Airport, the main huge airport hub there in the UK. | ||
After a huge fire at a nearby substation knocked out its power, stranding passengers around the world and angering airlines who questioned how such crucial infrastructure could fail. | ||
Well, get used to it, folks. | ||
Get used to it. | ||
This is the collapse. | ||
This is what it looks like. | ||
This is what it's like. | ||
Your substations will start to fail, and you'll look around and realize that nobody has the wherewithal or knowledge to repair it. | ||
And then somebody will come along and steal all the copper out of it to sell. | ||
And then you'll be left with a decaying husk of a once-industrialized nation reverting back to You know, tribalistic survival. | ||
It's on purpose. | ||
It's by design. | ||
And would it shock you to know that this is all the consequence of a climate change initiative? | ||
Let's go now to clip number 18. Heathrow Airport decided to switch its backup systems to accommodate climate change scams. | ||
And now the whole world is screeching to a halt because their substation is on fire. | ||
It's collapsed. | ||
And it's designed. | ||
unidentified
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Let's watch. | |
And had moved towards a biomass generator that was designed not to completely replace the grid, but work alongside the grid. | ||
And therefore, basically, their net zero compliant backup system has completely failed in its core function at the first time of asking. | ||
I mean, it beggars... | ||
Beggars believe. | ||
That was from GB News. | ||
So that's the reality. | ||
Now, Reuters doesn't tell you that. | ||
Reuters is acting confused. | ||
And this is sort of the last gasp of the mainstream media, is just pretending they don't know. | ||
Pretending they have no idea. | ||
I mean, they quote people in here. | ||
You would think they would have a significant backup power, one top executive from a European airline told Reuters. | ||
Yeah, you'd think they would. | ||
No, I mean, they did. | ||
I mean, they did until it was removed to meet net zero requirements. | ||
Net zero requirements. | ||
Yeah, it's on purpose. | ||
It's by design. | ||
And of course, if you are a regular viewer of this program, you know that it gets even more crazy and the whole thing is even that much more ridiculous when you heard the reporter just now say that they replaced diesel generators because diesel bad, | ||
right? Diesel bad, global warming. | ||
Oops, I mean climate change. | ||
Diesel causes it. | ||
We got to get rid of diesel, replacing it with biomass. | ||
If you're a viewer of this show, you know exactly what that means. | ||
That means trees that were cut down in British Columbia. | ||
So they got rid of the diesel generators, replaced them with generators that burn trees that are chopped down from old-growth forests in Canada, shipped across the Atlantic Ocean, and burned for fuel, because that's green, apparently. | ||
And it fails completely, and now the biggest airport in the UK is totally shut down. | ||
Thousands of flights having to be diverted. | ||
Total global chaos. | ||
Because their generator doesn't work. | ||
Because they got rid of the one that did. | ||
Because climate change. | ||
Because climate change. | ||
Now let's just review, let's peruse this Reuters article here. | ||
Do they mention that? | ||
Let's see if they mention that. | ||
Nope, nope, no mention here. | ||
They do mention that hundreds of thousands of people are going to be disadvantaged by this. | ||
Industry experts warn that some passengers forced to land in Europe may have to stay in transit lounges if they lack paperwork to leave the airport. | ||
Global flight schedules will be affected as aircraft and crews will now be out of position, forcing characters to rapidly reconfigure their networks. | ||
Just massive, you know, downstream negative effects of this. | ||
People will have to suddenly buy hotels. | ||
They wouldn't have to earlier. | ||
Prices around Heathrow Airport immediately jumped. | ||
500 pounds, roughly five times the normal price, so they're making a pretty penny out of this. | ||
Airport executive, electrical engineers, and pastors questioned how Britain's gateway to the world could be forced to close by one fire, however large. | ||
Heathrow and London's other major airports have been hit by other outages in recent years, most recently by an automated gate failure and an air traffic system meltdown, both in 2023. | ||
Pictures on social media show the airport terminals in near darkness during the night and British... | ||
Energy Minister Ed Milibrand said it appeared to be that the catastrophic fire had prevented the backup power system from working. | ||
Okay. How is it that critical infrastructure of national and global importance is completely dependent on a single power source without an alternative? | ||
If that's the case, then this is clear planning failure by the airport. | ||
No, they did this on purpose. | ||
No, they had a perfectly viable power backup generator. | ||
They got rid of it. | ||
Because you told them to, because apparently burning trees is better than burning fuel. | ||
Burning gasoline, diesel gasoline. | ||
Experts in the power supply say the type of fire that erupted overnight was extremely rare. | ||
They added that there should be sufficient alternative supplies to get everybody back online quickly. | ||
But yeah, no mention. | ||
No mention of the fact that they had a backup system that they replaced to meet net zero. | ||
Because all this is intertwined, you understand? | ||
All this is deeply intertwined. | ||
The collapse of, like, the capability of keeping things running. | ||
Well, that's going to inform your decision to do things that are going to cause catastrophic failures because you don't understand exactly the intricacies of this highly complicated network. | ||
So, you know, that's all tied in. | ||
But you also have the media being suicidally devoted to the... | ||
Climate change agenda to the point that they will not report if it's the cause of a major disaster. | ||
So if they do something like change out the power generator that causes this massive inconvenience and pisses off tens of thousands of people who are now no longer going to be able to make the wedding that they were flying to or take advantage of the vacation they've been saving up for for so long. | ||
Now they're stranded at some La Quinta. | ||
In the UK, whatever their equivalent is, paying $500 a night for a $100 room, they might not be so, you know, eager to support Green New Deal global warming climate change agenda policy when it so horribly impacts their own lives. | ||
So it's not going to be reported. | ||
So they're not going to say that's what it was. | ||
They're going to act surprised and befuddled. | ||
They're going to act like they don't know what's going on. | ||
Just like they acted like they didn't know where the virus came from because they didn't want people to distrust science because they wanted them to take the vaccine. | ||
They have motives above and beyond telling people the truth and giving people a clear-eyed, full-fledged view of reality. | ||
They will leave things out and deliberately not report things if it would have a negative impact on their desired policy, up to and including covering up rapes because that could interfere with transgender bathrooms. | ||
Covering up the lab leak because that could interfere with the vaccine uptake numbers and ignoring the climate change agenda that caused the outage at Heathrow Airport because they want to keep doing things that dismantle industrial society in Europe as part of their overall superlative goal of destroying white people in their nations and countries and economic capability. | ||
We got more stories here, but let's go to your calls for now. | ||
Let's go to Sean in California. | ||
Thanks for calling in. | ||
Sean, you're on the air. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
unidentified
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Good morning, Harrison. | |
Good morning. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, did your screener give you a hint of what I was going to reference? | |
I don't know what it means. | ||
Stump versus Sparkman. | ||
It sounds like a comic book. | ||
I don't know what it is. | ||
unidentified
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I know. | |
435 U.S. 349 case from 1978. | ||
We've been having all these judges, you know, being trouble for Trump. | ||
People are talking about, you know, Justice Roberts, Amy Comey Barrett and the like. | ||
This case was a Supreme Court case where they established that this judge, Judge Stump, a terrible name for a judge, that even though he made a horrible decision, basically he ruled that a woman would be sterilized, | ||
and they lied to the woman because the mother didn't want the woman being promiscuous or whatever. | ||
Well, she gets married later and she can't have kids. | ||
She discovered the appendectomy was actually a hysterectomy. | ||
Wow. And the judge, they say, the judge, you can't retaliate. | ||
They need judicial immunity. | ||
And it also triggered in my brain a thought. | ||
You know, Trump's talking about police immunity. | ||
The founders feared a judiciary that could not be held to account. | ||
So maybe all these judges exposing themselves by being against Trump is a good thing because then they can be impeached and they can, you know, Put their head out there so we know which judges are actually a problem and are prone to making these terrible decisions. | ||
The issue is that one person alone cannot remove a judge. | ||
And I was going over this topic with Grok, which led me to this case. | ||
So that might be something for you guys to go down that little rabbit trail and look at all the way that we as a populace have to get together. | ||
And actually get these judges either impeached or removed from the bench, what have you. | ||
But it's got to be a lawful way to do it. | ||
You're exactly right. | ||
So the outcome of that decision was judicial immunity, basically? | ||
It upheld the judicial immunity? | ||
unidentified
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Sean?...against judges for their decisions. | |
I'm just like, wow, this guy basically sterilized a woman, and they sided with it, which also told me back then, the Supreme Court, you know, we talk about Roe v. | ||
Wade and all that. | ||
Some of these judges back then were just as equally far-left or radical that they could believe they could sterilize someone because the mother, quote-unquote, said the girl was a little bit retarded. | ||
It's just like, wow, that's ruthless, you know? | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
So this is like the perfect example of where we do need to step up. | ||
I mean, how many times on this show and on this network, we've been so... | ||
I'm sort of disappointed at Trump supporters, especially, and it's our big beef with the QAnon movement. | ||
I know people like Q or whatever have different interpretation, but overall the interpretation of Q was like, don't worry about it. | ||
Trust the plan. | ||
Sit back and relax. | ||
Patriots in control, right? | ||
That's what they say it over and over. | ||
Again, you can interpret that however you want, but obviously the message was, don't worry about it. | ||
We got this, right? | ||
They don't have it, folks. | ||
The Patriots are not in control. | ||
And so we've always said Trump is a beachhead. | ||
Alex had a great... | ||
Rant yesterday, Trump is a lifeboat. | ||
You got people hammering at the bottom of the lifeboat, you know, thinking that they're opposing Trump, not realizing that, like, this is what we got. | ||
This is what we got. | ||
We got to use this. | ||
We'll get to a bigger boat eventually, but not if we drown. | ||
None of you destroy the lifeboat. | ||
But, you know, regardless, the idea is that you can't just stop with Trump in office. | ||
We have to be active, but people look around and go, well, what can I do? | ||
I have no choice but to sit back and watch. | ||
This is... | ||
The exact moment that we need to be activated. | ||
That the American people need to find out who these judges are, and everybody who lives near that judge needs to be contacting their city council, their congressmen, their senators, the judge himself, peacefully, lawfully protesting what's going on. | ||
We need to be the backup that he needs. | ||
They have this judicial array of 700 judges who apparently feel the right to interfere with absolutely everything. | ||
The numbers going around were like already they've put 64 stays on Trump's orders compared to like Obama his entire eight years had like 12. Trump's had 64 in two months. | ||
And every day, every day you wake up and it's like judge puts a stop on transgenders in the military. | ||
Judge puts a stop on transgender prisoners in women's prison. | ||
Judge puts a stop on deporting illegal aliens. | ||
That's their backstop. | ||
That's their plan B. They lost the presidency, but they still have this judiciary. | ||
So now we need to get active and be the offense to destroy that defensive maneuver to pave the way for Trump to continue to focus on what matters, not get bogged down in these potentially years-long litigation over what should be an executive prerogative. | ||
Enough is enough. | ||
SCOTUS slapped down these delusional judges and let Trump get to work. | ||
And I don't know if they will. | ||
You were referencing a story that was a pretty big one today of the secret group that apparently Chief Justice Roberts and a number of other Supreme Court justices and judges are all involved in. | ||
I have the story somewhere here. | ||
Sorry, my stack is a little bit disorganized today. | ||
But I thought I had that one on top. | ||
But maybe it's on bottom again. | ||
Maybe every story I'm looking for is always the last one in the stack. | ||
Nope. Here it is. | ||
Chief Justice John Roberts caught an elitist club of judges and lawyers that include James Boasberg, Beryl Howell, Amit Mehta, and Kenji Brown Jackson. | ||
So again, I'm not holding out a great deal of hope for the Supreme Court. | ||
To step in, considering Judge Roberts seems in bed with all these people. | ||
Investigative journalist named Bad Kitty Unleashed reported on Thursday that Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts is involved in a secretive invite-only club for elite judges in Washington, D.C. The secretive club America's Inns of Court also includes radical America-hating judges James Boasberg. | ||
He's the one that was trying to get the Trendy Aragua people. | ||
Reintegrated into America. | ||
He's the one that said, turn the planes around, bring them back home. | ||
The murderers and rapists and gang members, we need them, even though they're foreign. | ||
John Roberts has been a chief justice of the Supreme Court since September 2005. | ||
What in the world is he doing fraternizing with a secret group of far-left colleagues? | ||
This is a shocking development. | ||
The Supreme Court justice is holding secretive meetings with far-left district judges who are running a judicial coup on the current president of the United States. | ||
This is a huge development. | ||
First, just think, two days ago on Tuesday, Chief Justice Roberts released a statement attacking President Trump for calling on these same crooked district judges to be impeached. | ||
And now we have evidence that John Roberts was in a secret group with these very same judges. | ||
Here's what Roberts said to the U.S. president, who is under siege by the judicial branch. | ||
He said this, quote, They are going over and above their constitutionally allowed activity. | ||
They do not have a right to dictate to the executive branch executive decisions. | ||
And they're wrong when they make these decisions, by the way. | ||
One of the judges that said that they had to undo the destruction of USAID in his decision says that USAID was a congressional... | ||
Creation of Congress and therefore had to be destroyed by Congress. | ||
But it wasn't. | ||
USAID was created by executive order by JFK in the 60s. | ||
So he's wrong about that. | ||
But that decision still stands apparently because apparently judges can just be factually incorrect, totally wrong, outside of the bounds of their constitutional authority, and yet we just have to act like it's real? | ||
We have to act like it's legitimate and argue with them and spend millions of dollars while the ACLU tries desperately to cling on to A hundred murderous drug dealers tattooed up Trende Aragua Venezuelans. | ||
Why? Why is this a thing? | ||
Why is this a case? | ||
And if impeachment's not the way to go, then I guess just executive prerogative has to be exerted and they just have to ignore these judges and they can flail and they can whine and they can complain and they can go to hell because what they're doing and again, | ||
it's like How do they not understand that all they're doing, and by the way, they've run policy polls or opinion polls, the American people, something like 80 plus percent of all Americans say, | ||
yeah, Trump has the right to do this. | ||
What are these judges talking about? | ||
So they're giving all of the authority Trump could ever want to make himself a dictator. | ||
Like, they're so worried about Trump being a dictator, then why are they filing frivolous? | ||
Outrageous, ridiculous lawsuits against everything Trump is doing. | ||
If they had been selective, they'd picked just the most outrageous cases they can find. | ||
A judge put a stop to the expulsion of the Palestinian protester from Colombia. | ||
That is, and I've explained it before, a case where, okay, you have a person who's here legally, who has not been convicted of a crime, who's being treated as an enemy combatant, even though he has a green card. | ||
And you're violating an individual's personal right of freedom and expression and all this stuff. | ||
Like, okay, a judge should step in and try to stop that. | ||
Because even though he's not a citizen, his wife's a citizen, and he has a green card, he's gone through the right process. | ||
There's a place for judicial review. | ||
It's not Trinde Aragua plane flights. | ||
It's not transgender members of the military. | ||
This is not where they should be. | ||
You're not able to exert a veto of the president. | ||
That doesn't make any sense. | ||
And you're only paving the way for Trump to have a very legitimate claim of I can't work like this. | ||
This is interfering with the democratic outcome of the election. | ||
And so I'm therefore, you know, overruling and ignoring these people like they're giving that to Trump. | ||
So like this is advice to them. | ||
Like you can't do this over and over. | ||
You are paving the way for That's what an empire, that's what happens when democracies become empires, when republics become empires. | ||
This is what happens. | ||
100%. Every single time. | ||
You have a very popular, usually elected leader, or in some other way, legitimately getting power. | ||
And then when the power structure tries desperately to retain power, when they're trying to give it back to the people, or undo some of the more damaging And they keep getting stopped by senators or, | ||
you know, Caesar in Rome, like the senators were just, they refused to let him make any changes that would have actually helped the Roman people. | ||
And so they're justified and going, all right, then we're not listening to you anymore. | ||
Now I'm in charge and anybody who opposes me is the enemy. | ||
And now you have an empire and you consolidate it over the next couple generations. | ||
But that's what always happens. | ||
Why are they doing everything they possibly can to encourage America's transformation into an outright empire? | ||
I don't know, but it's stupid and ill-advised and infuriating and should be stopped. | ||
Thank you for the call, Sean. | ||
Let's go to Stephen in Alaska on about prison reform. | ||
We have about a minute left in this segment. | ||
Go ahead, Stephen, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Well, first of all... | |
Well, you were talking about the penitentiary, you know, somebody going and being penitent, right? | ||
Right. That was the tenet of our founding fathers, you know, that basically you go and reflect upon your mistakes. | ||
unidentified
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So we don't make them again. | |
Then you progress to what they call, what is it, rehabilitation. | ||
So blow your head out, you go to a physical therapist and a surgeon, and you're rehabilitating. | ||
Well, you're not going to rehabilitate somebody with a criminal mentality if they're not reflecting upon their mentality. | ||
Exactly. And I speak on this because I'm an ex-convict. | ||
I got out of prison just over 20 years ago. | ||
I haven't even had a traffic ticket, okay? | ||
The reason why is because it's time to either get busy living or get busy dying, okay? | ||
And I chose life. | ||
Now, when you look at today's prison systems, the sex offenders are all protected. | ||
They claim that they're mentally ill, and they are, and they're not giving them anything. | ||
We're not saying we should treat them. | ||
We're not treating them. | ||
I tell you what, Stephen, I'd like to continue this conversation on the other side. | ||
If you can hang on, we'll go to a quick commercial break, and then I'll be back, because I do want to talk about this, and I think it's, again, something where there's a major problem, and the left is the only one noticing it and offering suggestions, and their suggestions are asinine and ridiculous. | ||
They want to abolish prison. | ||
So if we don't want that to happen, then we have to come up with another solution, not just ignore the problem. | ||
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You will die. | |
Now is the time to press the attack. | ||
And I know you feel the same way. | ||
They declared war on us, and we accepted the challenge. | ||
You will die. | ||
You have your war face on, folks. | ||
If so, share that video at RealAlexJones on X. | ||
This is what happens when Chase gets into the office early in the morning. | ||
He showed up at like 7.30 this morning, and I walked down the hallway during one of the breaks, and I heard that. | ||
I just heard Alex yelling. | ||
Chase is like, got a cigarette hanging out of his mouth, and he's like editing. | ||
I'm like, I don't know what he's working on, but it was that. | ||
It was that. | ||
That's what happens when Chase gets in early. | ||
So there you go, folks. | ||
Support us at thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
Trump and Hegseth are live. | ||
We'll go to them in a second. | ||
I do want to finish up our conversation with Stephen in Alaska, as you are, as you said, an ex-con, or you spend some time in a penitentiary. | ||
And yeah, it's one of the things that everybody I know, and unfortunately it's quite a few people that have spent time in prison, specifically federal prison, they all come out like, holy crap, prison is, like the whole system is so messed up, we gotta do something about this. | ||
And I agree, and I think it's a... | ||
It's something we can steal from the left. | ||
The left, just like I always talk about with, you know, you got these videos of kids like crying in the car going, I have a job, but I'm living in my car because I can't afford rent. | ||
This is so messed up. | ||
The economy is terrible. | ||
And the response from Republicans is just like, pick up yourself by your bootstraps, kid. | ||
Stop complaining. | ||
And it's like, okay, you realize the other side of the political aisle is saying, oh, we hear you. | ||
It's terrible. | ||
And we have a solution. | ||
Join us and everything will be better. | ||
Who do you think they're going to go with? | ||
Whose side do you think they're going to choose? | ||
Doesn't matter if they're wrong. | ||
Doesn't matter if the socialists are idiots and their ideas only make things worse. | ||
They're at least showing concern and trying to do something for the problems that are very real in these people's lives. | ||
So same thing with prison. | ||
There's major problems with prison, and the response from conservatives is to ignore it, pretend it doesn't exist, and the response from the leftists is to abolish prisons. | ||
Now, that's a non-starter. | ||
That's stupid, but that's the only thing being suggested right now. | ||
My suggestion is keep the prison system as it is, build a parallel prison system so that every prison has a little mini prison next to it that's like a small town, and basically if you have really good behavior in prison, you get to go be in this small town where you can have a job, | ||
and you can practice being in society, and it can be a way to actually reintegrate, because who is being reintegrated in society when you're put in something so unlike society, prison, where everything is controlled? | ||
And you're constantly under threat, and you have to fight to survive. | ||
It's so stupid the way that we run prisons right now, and there's no even attempt to truly rehabilitate people. | ||
I don't think it's impossible to do, but nobody is offering a suggestion other than let's just get rid of prisons, which again is retarded. | ||
So we've got to do something. | ||
What do you think about that, Stephen? | ||
What's your idea for reforming the prison system as having experienced it yourself? | ||
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Reformation of the prison system would be a huge task. | |
Can it be done? | ||
I think so. | ||
Problem is, we've got to recognize a lot of the ways that it is being utilized. | ||
You're talking about the left, how they have these reach-out things. | ||
Well, a lot of that's all designed and head-tased through the Frankfurt School style of thinking. | ||
Yep. So they take these people who are mentally ill, and make no mistake, that's what transgenderism is, etc. | ||
They take these people who are mentally ill, they coddle them, then they give them, and nothing's free, but they give them things for free, and these people think that they're not. | ||
that is the way out, then they are a part of the system that they shouldn't be a part of. | ||
When it comes down to it, and this is going to sound really bad, human beings perform to the least expectation | ||
Okay, so if there's really no expectation for you to get out and stay out, then you're not going to. | ||
You know, somebody's got to set the standards higher. | ||
Does that mean that the system itself has to do it? | ||
I don't believe so. | ||
I think it has to go to the individual. | ||
You have to hit that brick wall or what they call rock bottom and alcohol synonymous and all that. | ||
You've got to hit that. | ||
You've got to wake up. | ||
And if you don't wake up, you don't change your playground. | ||
You don't change your play toys. | ||
You'll never get out of the same behavior cycle that you're in. | ||
That's why recidivism is so high. | ||
Exactly. And look, like I was saying, the penitentiary, our prison system, comes out of this idea that you would go and be penitent, and sure, there was the punishment of you being isolated, but it was also formulated in a culture where most everybody had family, | ||
they had responsibility. | ||
I mean, you think back, even in the 60s... | ||
People would be, like, arrested if they couldn't prove they had a job, right? | ||
If somebody had money and was living but didn't have a job, then that was suspicious. | ||
And they would, like, arrest you if you've ever read Confederacy of Dunces, right? | ||
One of the main characters. | ||
Their whole deal is they get arrested for vagrancy because they couldn't prove that they had an income. | ||
They couldn't prove where they were getting money, so they must be stealing it. | ||
So they didn't catch him. | ||
But they were able to actually force him to get a job because... | ||
You know, in order to stay out of jail. | ||
Basically, like, you either have to get a job or go to jail. | ||
So anyway, so the prison system was developed in a much different culture and civilization than we have now, where, you know, you're just, you're, you know, taking people off the streets, putting them in prison, and it's, like, not a major difference in the quality of their lives. | ||
You're living in a ghetto surrounded by gangs and shootings and drug users. | ||
It's, like, going to prisons, not all that different, certainly not worse. | ||
So, and then you're just, you know, Boot it out with no prospects and no family support structure, just like a welfare card and a felon note on your CV, and yeah, you're not getting a lot of opportunity to break out of the cycle of recidivism. | ||
Again, this is just, you know, if we don't want to live in a country beset by millions upon millions of career criminals, then we have to do something to change. | ||
To match the world that we live in now, not continue to persist with 18th century constructs that no longer serve the purpose that they were built for. | ||
That's just my opinion personally. | ||
Should we go to this Trump-Hegseth? | ||
Is this an interesting... | ||
All right, let's go to Trump and Hegseth now. | ||
They're live talking about something. | ||
We're not sure. | ||
We're getting different things telling them different organizations telling us different things they're talking about. | ||
Well, let's hear it for ourselves. | ||
I'll start by saying we had a meeting yesterday on the Department of Education, which is being moved. | ||
We're going to educate the children in their states where they can get a proper education. | ||
The numbers are horrible the way it is, and we're going to make a move that's very big. | ||
I don't think it's even risky a little bit. | ||
I think it's going to be amazing. | ||
Should have been done years ago. | ||
They've been talking about doing it for many years, but nobody ever got it off. | ||
But we did. | ||
There was great excitement and great acceptance of it by almost everybody, including a lot of Democrats, actually. | ||
I do want to say that I've decided that the SBA, the Small Business Administration, headed by Kelly Loeffler, who's a terrific person, will handle all of the student loan portfolio. | ||
We have a portfolio that's very large, lots of loans, tens of thousands of loans. | ||
Pretty complicated deal. | ||
And that's coming out of the Department of Education immediately, and it's going to be headed up by Kelly Loeffler, SBA, and they're all set for it. | ||
They're waiting for it. | ||
It'll be serviced much better than it has in the past. | ||
It's been a mess. | ||
And also, Bobby Kennedy, the Health and Human Services, will be handling special needs and all of the nutrition programs and everything else. | ||
Rather complex, but that's going to be headed by... | ||
And handled by health and human services. | ||
So I think that'll work out very well. | ||
Those two elements will be taken out of the Department of Education. | ||
And then all we have to do is get the students to get guidance from the people that love them and cherish them, including their parents. | ||
By the way, they'll be totally involved in their education, along with the boards and the governors and the states. | ||
And it's going to be a great... | ||
It's going to be a great situation. | ||
I guarantee that in a few years from now, I hope I'm going to be around to see it, but I think we're going to see a lot of it. | ||
I think that you're going to have tremendous results. | ||
You're going to have results like Norway, Sweden, Denmark, a lot of the countries that do so well. | ||
I think you're going to have a lot of those results. | ||
If you look at Iowa and Indiana and Idaho, so many places that run so well. | ||
Florida, Texas, big ones. | ||
You're going to have great education, much better than it is now at half the cost. | ||
And we're not even doing it as a cost item, although you will save probably half, maybe more than that. | ||
And you're not going to be at the bottom of the list. | ||
You're going to be much higher. | ||
And maybe you'll be, I will guarantee, some of the states will be at the top of the list. | ||
They'll be comparable or better than these number one, two, three, four, five countries, the countries that are in the top five positions. | ||
So that's, to me, it's very exciting and it's been received very well. | ||
So I just wanted to tell you about the student loans and special needs. | ||
But we're here for a reason today that is very exciting. | ||
And I'm thrilled to announce that at my direction, the United States Air Force is moving forward with the world's first sixth generation fighter jet. | ||
Number six, sixth generation. | ||
Nothing in the world. | ||
It comes even close to it and it'll be known as the F-47. | ||
The generals picked a title and it's a beautiful number. | ||
F-47. | ||
It's something the likes of which nobody has seen before in terms of all of the attributes of a fighter jet. | ||
There's never been anything even close to it from speed to maneuverability to what it can have to payload. | ||
And this has been in the works for a long period of time. | ||
After a rigorous and thorough competition between some of America's top aerospace companies, the Air Force is going to be awarding the contract for the next generation air dominance platform to Boeing. | ||
As you know, it was highly competed for. | ||
There was a lot of competition, generals, and it's been going on for a long time. | ||
Very, very tough competition. | ||
This plane has produced numbers that nobody's ever seen before. | ||
The F-47 will be the most advanced, most capable, most lethal aircraft ever built. | ||
An experimental version of the plane has secretly been flying for almost five years, and we're confident that it massively overpowers the capabilities of any other nation. | ||
There's no other nation. | ||
We know every other plane. | ||
I've seen every one of them. | ||
And it's not even close. | ||
This is a next level. | ||
You know, level five is good. | ||
This is level six, they say. | ||
The F-47 is equipped with state-of-the-art stealth technology. | ||
It's virtually unseeable and unprecedented power. | ||
It's got the most power of any jet of its kind ever made. | ||
Maneuverability, likewise, there's never been anything like it, despite the power and speed. | ||
Its speed is top. | ||
It's over two, which is something that you don't hear very often. | ||
America's enemies will never see it coming. | ||
Hopefully we won't have to use it for that purpose, but you have to have it. | ||
And if it ever happens, they won't know what the hell hit them. | ||
A new fleet of these magnificent planes will be built in the air during my administration for the next... | ||
A couple of years, it's ready to go. | ||
They've already built much of what has to be built in terms of production, including the sheds. | ||
We'll ensure that the USA continues to dominate the skies. | ||
We've given an order for a lot. | ||
We can't tell you the price because it would give way to some of the technology and some of the size of the plane, good-sized plane. | ||
This contract also represents a historic investment in our defense industrial base, helping to keep America at the cutting edge of aerospace and technology. | ||
Our allies are calling constantly. | ||
They want to buy them also, and certain allies will be selling them, perhaps toned down versions. | ||
We like to tone them down about 10%, which probably makes sense, because someday maybe they're not our allies, right? | ||
But I would like to ask Secretary Hegseth, who's doing a fantastic job. | ||
He's really, really been very inspiring in so many ways. | ||
And I must say that before he speaks, we have had record people wanting to join our military in the last two and a half months, literally since this, I think probably since the election, November 5th, | ||
but especially since we came to office. | ||
And since I announced Pete, he's young, he's smart, he's strong, he loves it. | ||
And they love him. | ||
But we've had record numbers of people wanting to join our military. | ||
Now, if you go back six months, it was the exact opposite. | ||
You had record numbers of people not wanting to join the military. | ||
Now you have record numbers of people wanting to be in our military. | ||
And that's a really, that's a great idea. | ||
That shows you we're really on the right track. | ||
Pete, maybe say a few words. | ||
Sure. Well, Mr. President, this is a big day. | ||
This is a big day for our warfighters. | ||
This is a big day for our country, a big day in the world. | ||
The name of this program is The Next Generation of Air Dominance. | ||
And, Mr. President, because of your leadership, your clarity, America is going to have generations in the future of air dominance because of this sixth-generation fighter. | ||
We've had the F-15, we had the F-16, the F-18, the F-22, the F-35. | ||
Now we have the F-47, which sends a very direct, clear message to our allies that we're not going anywhere and to our enemies that we will be able to project power around the globe, unimpeded, for generations to come. | ||
Mr. President, this is a gift to my kids and your kids, to my grandkids and your grandkids. | ||
This is a historic investment in the American military, in the American industrial base, in American industry that will help revive the warrior ethos inside our military, which we're doing, rebuild our military, which the previous administration did not do, | ||
by the way, Mr. President. | ||
They paused this program and were prepared to potentially scrap it. | ||
We know this is- That's Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump announcing that new fighter jet. | ||
Which, okay, I mean, I was under the impression that the age of fighter jets was sort of on the way out. | ||
And I'm sure they're aware of and working on the fact that the future is drones and robot warriors. | ||
I wouldn't be surprised if the 47 jet... | ||
It was mostly AI-powered, after all, Elon Musk is likely involved in that in some regard. | ||
But it will at least be a boon to our military-industrial complex, so that's nice. | ||
That is nice. | ||
I want to get to a few of these stories. | ||
I won't elaborate on them too much, but they are pretty crazy, pretty bombshell stories. | ||
This one from InfoWars.com. | ||
Documents reveal government-backed censorship network, including GEC, USAID, and private media firms. | ||
This is from Cindy Harper from Reclaim the Net. | ||
Government-backed censorship tools extended far beyond foreign disinformation, shaping domestic narratives with the help of private media enforcers. | ||
America First Legal has unveiled a trove of revealing documents obtained through litigation against the U.S. Department of State's now defunct Global Engagement Center. | ||
These documents expose a sweeping censorship network orchestrated by government agencies under the guise of combating misinformation and disinformation. | ||
The findings implicate not only the GEC, but also the USAID, the British Foreign Commonwealth Development Office and various media monitoring organizations in a coordinated effort to control public discourse and suppress racism. | ||
The GEC was initially established to counteract foreign disinformation, yet recently released documents demonstrating That it had become a vehicle for state-sponsored propaganda. | ||
AFL's Freedom of Information Act request have uncovered evidence of the GEC's collaboration with private media firms leveraging their influence to censor narratives deemed unfavorable. | ||
The lawsuits against GEC further revealed that USAID developed an internal disinformation primer endorsing censorship strategies employed by private companies and advocating for their expansion. | ||
One of the most alarming discoveries in AFL's findings is the coordinated campaign between the GEC and USAID to police COVID-19 misinformation. | ||
Internal emails show that GEC sought to maintain, quote, dialogue and connectivity with USAID to counter perceived falsehoods about the pandemic, despite them being absolutely true, I will add. | ||
I'll add that the falsehoods that they were coordinating to suppress were in fact the absolute truth as now admitted by everybody officially. | ||
Despite USAID's mission being humanitarian aid and democratic reform, the agency was deeply engaged in efforts to curb discussions on COVID-19 narratives. | ||
And as we explained while it was going on, I mean, we knew this was happening. | ||
Now we have the sort of internal documents explaining exactly how the influence and network and censorship took place. | ||
But we always knew it was happening because we were the ones being censored. | ||
And we knew they were censoring reality, true things. | ||
And we knew it was a testing phase. | ||
Testing how far they could take censorship, how much they could justify under the cover and claim of it's for your health and it's dangerous misinformation because it could... | ||
You know, get people to not take the vaccine and that could kill people. | ||
Therefore, it's not that we're censoring speech. | ||
We're providing a health service. | ||
We're actually, it's dangerous and it's a health risk to hear things that we don't want you to hear. | ||
So therefore, we're justified in censoring this stuff. | ||
It was always a testing ground, a probing action. | ||
See how far they could go, how much they could get away with, how they could get private industry to go along with it. | ||
They learned lessons during COVID that they're applying now. | ||
The censorship has not ended with COVID-19. | ||
It began or it was codified and really got into operation during 2019 or 2020 and COVID-19 outbreak. | ||
So good to see that it's being dismantled, discovered, and in some way undone. | ||
Meanwhile, Europe's suicide continues at a pace. | ||
Replacement migration. | ||
EU Parliament Committee approves importing 7 million aliens by 2030. | ||
The European Parliament's Civil Liberties Committee approved the EU's commission in their latest proposal to solve the EU's labor shortages by opening more accessible legal pathways for third-world migrants to come work in Europe. | ||
The plan foresees importing at least 7 million additional labor migrants by the end of the decade. | ||
And if the patterns of the past continue into the future, then they'll import 7 million people to fill out the labor workforce, and then 5 million of them will go on the dole and not get jobs. | ||
And the problem will only be made worse and the budget's only more constricted by this asinine policy repeatedly implemented despite the fact that it fails every single time because it's not about boosting the economy. | ||
If they want to do that, they would stop doing things like turning off fully functional generators to appease Greta Thunberg and the Green New Deal global warming psychos and just let their... | ||
But instead, they're doing everything they absolutely can to crush the European industry, crush European manufacturing capabilities, while simultaneously importing millions upon millions of government dependents to make the problem that much worse. | ||
It's genocide. | ||
That's what it is at the end of the day. | ||
Back here in America, we have this story. | ||
Former Squad Representative Cori Bush's husband indicted for allegedly pocketing $20,000 in PPP loans for personal benefit and enjoyment. | ||
The husband of former Representative Cori Bush allegedly bilked taxpayers out of more than $20,000 in a COVID loan scheme and used the money for his, quote, personal benefit and enjoyment. | ||
Courtney Meritus, 46, was charged in a federal indictment Thursday with two counts of wire fraud related to allegedly fraudulent applications he filed with the Small Business Administration in 2020 and 2021 that allowed him to collect and never repay government funds from the pandemic era. | ||
Economic Industry Disaster Relief Program and the Paycheck Protection Program. | ||
So he received $20,000 in fraudulent loans that he never paid back and never spent on what they were intended for because, well, he's a criminal, just like they all are. | ||
Mother of child dead from the measles says, quote, don't take the shots. | ||
My other four kids were fine, revealing that the child who died of measles was in fact killed by the hospital. | ||
And was the only one of the family actually given the measles shot. | ||
It was a preventable death, and the mother is now going public with that, trying to counteract the fact that her child's death is being used by the people who caused it to try to get more people into their vaccine program. | ||
Outrages German intelligence chief, says Ukraine war should keep going for another five years, because that was always the point, and it was never supposed to end. | ||
And finally, we have this. | ||
20-year-old white men are now more right-wing. | ||
Than 75-year-old white men, believe it or not. | ||
Because the youth are the ones subjected to the incredible amounts of discrimination, hatred, and oppression from this deeply anti-white and anti-male system that we operate in. | ||
And we will continue to grow in popularity with young people as everything continues to get worse and as our programs continue to set the standard in terms of recovery from the globalist schemes. | ||
That's going to do it for us, folks. | ||
Just know, you know, Tiffany Sianci was on Tim Pool yesterday and Vander Steele's acting like she got my leaks from some guy. | ||
We're the tip of the spear, folks. | ||
I hope you support us at the Alex Jones store.com. | ||
unidentified
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