Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
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What to see happen on my birthday is for Elon to be taken down. | |
Yes. Your words have consequences. | ||
And what happened after she said that about Elon Musk, she's a Texan in her own home state. | ||
After she said that... | ||
This morning, three explosive devices were found in Austin, Texas. | ||
We're here live on the scene at the Tesla dealership, where earlier today, an incendiary device, a homemade bomb, was discovered having been planted. | ||
And of course, this is typical or in line or as predicted by Infowars. | ||
I wonder if any folks are going to come back here at night. | ||
And firebomb this place. | ||
unidentified
|
Crazy that we were here just a little over a week ago with Alex Jones, and he literally predicted to a guy blocking the road for us to even leave, a protester, that they were going to try to firebomb this place. | |
And eight, nine days later, that's exactly what happened at the very location that we were at nine days ago. | ||
I mean, Alex Jones was right. | ||
Damaging a personal vehicle does not affect Elon. | ||
If anything, it's giving him more money to fix the vehicle that you damaged. | ||
Quite a lot of damage. | ||
He keyed this side as well, which as you can see this side, it even looks like it affected above the tire. | ||
This is a lot more damage. | ||
This comes less than a week after a possible arson at a Tesla dealership in Kansas City. | ||
So for this to be happening in Kansas, of all places. | ||
It's super shocking. | ||
Things spiraled out of control when a white SUV followed her and cut her off, stopping in the middle of the road. | ||
Gets out and walks straight up to my door window. | ||
So I cracked my window and I said, what is the problem? | ||
He goes, you need to sell your car. | ||
This is a Nazi car. | ||
You're driving it. | ||
You need to sell your car. | ||
It's just that they're just told you're bad. | ||
They're told you're evil. | ||
And then they just see you and they just feel good and they're going to get in your face. | ||
And so now these people, they're swatting people's families. | ||
They're swatting crew members' families here. | ||
They don't want to talk about it. | ||
Now the FBI is investigating. | ||
Now they're making arrests of people burning down the Tesla factories and charging them with federal crimes. | ||
So these people doing this need to understand you're going to get in trouble. | ||
You're going to go to jail. | ||
But they're so enraged, they're so angry, they're so brainwashed, and they think that they are the good guys. | ||
unidentified
|
Do I want to get Elon Musk out of politics? | |
Yeah, the world's richest man, the most influential in history, is now calling the shots. | ||
What has he done that really bothers you? | ||
He's arrogant. | ||
Drugged up. | ||
Naive. Welfare man, you're on your candid camera. | ||
You are. | ||
You got nothing better to do? | ||
You jealous? | ||
You jealous of the man? | ||
unidentified
|
Is that it? | |
Jealous, loser. | ||
No, you're not. | ||
You're a communist anti-American loser. | ||
You're jealous of success. | ||
That's what you are. | ||
unidentified
|
Losers, communist Marin County bums. | |
Yes, you are. | ||
You're a loser. | ||
Why do you hate Musk? | ||
Why do you hate Musk? | ||
So what? | ||
unidentified
|
You're a self-righteous moron. | |
No, I won't be quiet. | ||
unidentified
|
Who the hell do you think you are, you loser? | |
You're going to go Kia Tesla now? | ||
Go Kia Tesla. | ||
unidentified
|
Go ahead. | |
Show what great people you are. | ||
unidentified
|
Folks, you see the faces of losers? | |
These self-righteous communists? | ||
unidentified
|
They call themselves patriots. | |
They are the poison of the earth. | ||
You were recently on a Tesla takedown call calling for violence under 29. | ||
Would you like to clarify your comments? | ||
As you can see. | ||
Congresswoman, will you condone violence at the church? | ||
Investigators say someone shot out his driver's side window with a BB gun as he drove through the town of Zebulon late Sunday night. | ||
We have a family. | ||
unidentified
|
We got kids, you know, so who knows if that would have gone through and I was driving with my kids or, you know, it would have hit my buddy or something. | |
Vandalism and threats against the electric car brand continue to rise throughout the country. | ||
Authorities cracking down on public backlash against Tesla CEO Elon Musk. | ||
They have misjudged the American people. | ||
Yeah, they'll be able to intimidate 10-20%. | ||
But the other 80% are pissed. | ||
unidentified
|
While other networks lie to you about what's happening now, Infowars tells you the truth about what's happening next. | |
Infowars.com forward slash. | ||
Thursday, March 27th 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. | ||
Get everybody in the stuff together. | ||
Okay, three, two, one, let's jam. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll be right back. | |
We'll be right back. | ||
This is Thursday morning. | ||
unidentified
|
We're going to be in studio with Raw A. | |
He's a big nationalist at 10 a.m. today. | ||
Very excited to talk to him. | ||
He, of course, was totally anonymous online for a long time until his identity was leaked by left-wing terror groups. | ||
But it turns out every time they unmask the identity of one of these right-wing anonymous accounts, they turn out to be like strikingly handsome geniuses. | ||
It's not going well for them. | ||
It's not going well for the left trying to unmask their enemies and being like, he is a successful family man. | ||
See? You see, he's a successful family man with a great paying job and he does this on the side. | ||
Isn't that terrible? | ||
And yeah, it completely backfires. | ||
So unlucky for them, they unveiled Roy Ignatialist's identity and now he's able to come on the show in studio and talk to us. | ||
About how they're poisoning us and trying to kill us in a number of different ways. | ||
So very excited to talk to him about that. | ||
I also want to go through some videos. | ||
I'm going to have to do it. | ||
I'm going to have to get them prepared during the break. | ||
But I've started watching this show. | ||
And it must be from the early 80s or like late 70s at the latest. | ||
Called Yes Minister. | ||
From the UK. | ||
I'm not sure if anybody's ever seen this, but it is crazy. | ||
It's one of the funniest shows I've ever seen. | ||
And I think it's due for a remake. | ||
I think we need a yes president. | ||
Basically the story, well, we'll have to get into it, because I don't want to describe it and then not show you the clips. | ||
I gotta get the clips together. | ||
But... But it's basically about the deep state. | ||
Long story short, it's about the deep state. | ||
And it's amazing watching TV from 40 years ago, 50 years ago, that sounds exactly like what's going on today. | ||
And you realize, like, okay, it's been this way for a long time. | ||
And if anything, it's only gotten worse. | ||
But what we're dealing with here isn't exactly new. | ||
It's funny because in this show basically you have this prime minister who is very vain and vainglorious and self-obsessed. | ||
And it's basically him just being controlled by the civil servants in the UK government and just how they manipulate him and how they get what they want out of him. | ||
And it's very insightful and it's very interesting to see these arguments being made. | ||
In a way, it's almost an argument in favor of the deep state. | ||
Yeah, there it is. | ||
And I've got some very, very pertinent clips to show you from the first season of that. | ||
So stay tuned. | ||
Stay tuned for that, because you're not going to want to miss it. | ||
But let's begin today, as you do every day, with our daily dispatch. | ||
unidentified
|
*Bell rings* | |
All right, here it is, folks, your Daily Dispatch for Thursday, the 27th of March, 2025. | ||
Appeals court will not pause ruling that forced U.S. to reinstate federal workers. | ||
This is a theme throughout today. | ||
Appeals courts upholding these ridiculous rulings. | ||
A U.S. appeals court on Wednesday refused to pause a judge's ruling requiring the administration of President Donald Trump to reinstate more than 17,000 workers at six agencies who lost their jobs as part of Trump's purge of the federal workforce. | ||
A 2-1 panel of the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the Trump administration had failed to establish. | ||
A federal judge erred by finding that agencies likely could not fire workers in the direction of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, the Human Resources Department for the federal government. | ||
The Trump administration in court filings on March 17th said the agencies were working to reinstate the fired employees while temporarily placing them on paid leave. | ||
Wednesday's decision will be in place pending the outcome of the administration's appeal. | ||
The administration has also asked the Supreme Court to pause the judge's ruling. | ||
The decision applies to the Department of Defense, Department of Veteran Affairs, Department of Agriculture, Department of Energy, Department of the Interior, and the Treasury Department. | ||
Probationary employees typically have less than one year and sometimes less than two years of service in their current role, although some are long-time federal employees. | ||
The mass firings of probationary workers was the first step in broader efforts by Trump and top advisor Elon Musk to drastically shrink the federal workforce and slash government spending. | ||
Most agencies said they fired a few hundred probationary workers, but others terminated far more. | ||
The Treasury Department fired more than 7,600 people. | ||
The Department of Agriculture, about 5,700, and the Department of Veteran Affairs and Interior Department, about 1,700 each, according to court filings. | ||
District Judge William Alsup in San Francisco said that OPM, which is closely tied to the White House, improperly ordered the six agencies to fire workers, even though it has no power to do so. | ||
On the same day, a judge in Baltimore, Maryland, separately ordered 25,000 probationary workers at 18 agencies being reinstated, but on different legal grounds. | ||
That case involves all the agencies subject to all subs orders except the Department of Defense, which is said to have fired about 360 probationary employees. | ||
The Trump administration has appealed that decision. | ||
A Richmond-based appeals court recently refused to pause the ruling pending the outcome of the case. | ||
The judge's rulings did not bar agencies from firing probationary workers at all, but took issue with the manner in which the terminations were conducted. | ||
Which again, it's like they're ruling that you can't do it for two different reasons. | ||
I think that means neither reason is actually applicable. | ||
How can you not fire probationary workers, workers who were hired within the last year, especially since we have footage on camera of the Biden holdovers, or the people who were in power under Joe Biden, talking about all of the measures they were taking to prepare for Trump's incoming administration. | ||
In other words, everybody hired in the last year, I think, has to be looked at as a little bit suspect. | ||
As they could very well have been hired in the same way that the money was given out as the undercover video caught the Treasury operative talking about throwing gold bars off the Titanic. | ||
It was the EPA throwing gold bars off the Titanic. | ||
Just trying to fund as much as possible, as quickly as possible before Trump could get into office and stop them from stealing our money. | ||
Well, I also imagine they were hiring people as quickly as possible to try to fill up the positions. | ||
Before Trump could get in and actually use the government to its appropriate ends. | ||
So, infuriating. | ||
And again, another blow to the Trump administration from the judiciary with no, in my opinion, constitutional authority to interfere. | ||
Meanwhile, from Washington Post, appeals court upholds temporary block on Alien Enemies Act deportation. | ||
The Trump administration asked an appeals court to overturn Judge James E. Boesberg's temporary restraining order blocking the deportations. | ||
A federal appeals panel on Wednesday refused to allow the Trump administration to summarily deport migrants under a rarely invoked wartime power while litigation on the matter continues. | ||
The two-to-one decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. District It became a | ||
Flashpoint in the growing tensions between President Trump and the federal courts and upholding Boasburg's order Wednesday. | ||
The appellate panel stressed the temporary nature of the ban, which the judge imposed to prevent deportations until he could hear arguments on their legality. | ||
Circuit Court judges Karen Henderson and Patrick Patricia Millett cautioned in separate opinions that their decision should not be read as a final judgment on the merits of the Trump administration's use of the Alien Enemies Act. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
I mean, I'm in favor of invoking the Aliens Enemy Act because... | ||
That's what the law was written for, and it's being used to its purpose. | ||
And I think that's fine. | ||
On the other hand, I don't understand why the Trump administration has to invoke it. | ||
There are laws against coming into the country illegally. | ||
There are temporary protected statuses that can be revoked, and those people can be slated for deportation. | ||
I don't know what extra powers are given, except unless I guess you could... | ||
Get around any civil court cases that would be filed to prevent the deportations. | ||
I just don't know if it's worth the legal workaround. | ||
I think there are ways to expedite this, perhaps without using the Alien Enemies Act. | ||
And I'm just worried Trump is doing things that are giving the judges perfectly reasonable justification for interfering in this sort of stuff. | ||
And the example is this. | ||
Tufts PhD student on visa arrested by immigration authorities, school says. | ||
Rumeza Ozturk is a Turkish national, according to her lawyer. | ||
And there's actually video of this arrest happening, and it's frankly kind of chilling. | ||
You see a woman walking down the street when she's approached from like every different angle, surrounded by plainclothes masks. | ||
Officers, I assume. | ||
I mean, we don't really know. | ||
We're not actually super sure what, you know, branch of the government carried out the arrest. | ||
But it looked an awful lot like a scene from a World War II movie. | ||
Because this is what one could consider fascism. | ||
Except that it's being done on behalf of Israel. | ||
So I guess that's different. | ||
I guess it's different. | ||
When it's anti-Semitic wrong think. | ||
So there you see the woman walking down the street and being surrounded by these plainclothes officers all with these whatever they're called, gaiters, masks, face coverings. | ||
Arresting this woman and hauling her away. | ||
Now, as far as I know, There have been no charges filed against this person. | ||
And I also don't think she even participated in a protest, as far as I know. | ||
She did, however, write an op-ed against Israel. | ||
So there was that. | ||
So there was that. | ||
Which, again, it's almost like they're... | ||
It's almost like they're just being bad on purpose. | ||
So, we covered yesterday and the day before pretty extensively the California student, Chong, who came over from Korea when she was seven, valedictorian of her high school, participated in a protest on her college campus, only to find out that her legal status was revoked. | ||
She's going to be deported back to Korea. | ||
Where she has no family, no connections, probably doesn't even speak the language. | ||
Totally insane, but somehow they have this trick of turning conservatives into exactly who they say we are. | ||
Getting conservatives to fulfill every negative stereotype of them as long as it has to do with Israel. | ||
And posting about this on X, or talking about it on the show, you get a lot of comments of just like, She wasn't illegal. | ||
She was a foreigner and she was protesting. | ||
Tough luck. | ||
You gotta get out of here. | ||
You gotta leave. | ||
And what strikes me is the similarity from that to the way leftists talk about January 6th protesters. | ||
How like there's just something inhuman that enters into the mind of people when they're trying to justify their own brutal Policies, I guess. | ||
I mean, how many times have you seen or heard or in your own personal life tried to talk to somebody and just been like, this guy's an old man. | ||
He's a baker from Missouri. | ||
He went to January 6th. | ||
The doors were open for him. | ||
He high-fived the cops on the way in. | ||
And now he's being kept in solitary confinement for seven months straight. | ||
And a tiny concrete box with a fluorescent light that never turns off in freezing temperatures. | ||
And it's like, that's horrible. | ||
He didn't do anything wrong. | ||
And the left will just be like, well, he's a terrorist. | ||
Should have thought about it. | ||
Well, maybe he shouldn't have tried to overthrow the government then. | ||
Huh? Ever think about that, sweetie? | ||
And you're just like, what is wrong with you? | ||
Seriously, what is wrong? | ||
Like, what happened to you? | ||
What did they do to you to make you like this? | ||
This is awful. | ||
And then the same thing happens with the right wing when it comes to like... | ||
Protesting Israel. | ||
Here's this girl. | ||
It's her college campus. | ||
She is American for all intents and purposes. | ||
I think if you are raised somewhere from 7 years old to 22, you tend to absorb the culture a little bit. | ||
She probably doesn't even think of herself as an immigrant. | ||
She probably goes, oh yeah, well I came over when I was a kid. | ||
I think anyone under 10 sort of has that mindset. | ||
She goes and participates at a protest. | ||
The college campus, you know, says you have to leave. | ||
They don't want to. | ||
They get arrested for trespassing. | ||
And now she's going to be sent back to Korea. | ||
Now she's going to have her college career ruined. | ||
She's going to be sent to a place where she probably doesn't speak the language, definitely has no connections, no friends, no family, no ability to make money. | ||
That's cruel and unusual, right? | ||
And just like the leftists, you get the right where you just go, no. | ||
She should have thought about that before trying to overthrow Israel. | ||
She should have thought about that before trying to genocide the Israelis, huh? | ||
Like, you mean the protests that she produced? | ||
You mean the peaceful protests where she sat on the floor in the college hall? | ||
College that she pays $50,000 a year to go to? | ||
That's the crime that you're saying is worthy destroying her life completely? | ||
Well, sorry, this is what I voted for. | ||
And it's like, alright. | ||
You're an idiot. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know what to tell you. | ||
You're dumb. | ||
You're evil. | ||
You're an evil person. | ||
And you're the exact type of person with exactly the same motives as those left-wingers celebrating some grandpa rotting away in a jail cell because he happened to take an unapproved tour through the U.S. Capitol. | ||
Why can we not be human about this? | ||
Why can we not be human? | ||
But, on the other hand, they do have that... | ||
They can say, well, she was protesting. | ||
Well, she was a foreigner who was protesting. | ||
And I'm too stupid to understand nuance or detail, so I hear protesting foreigner, I say deport, right? | ||
But at least they have that. | ||
In this case, unless I'm not seeing something, I don't think she participated in a protest. | ||
I don't think she was arrested for disturbing the peace. | ||
They don't actually give a reason. | ||
In this article, as to why this happened, what they did find was that she engaged in activities in support of Hamas, a foreign terrorist organization that relishes the killing of Americans. | ||
A visa is a privilege, not a right, glorifying and supporting terrorists. | ||
kill Americans. | ||
Do we not see the slippery slope that we're on? | ||
Can we not identify how this is a stepping stone towards total oppression in this country? | ||
I mean, are we really having to make the same arguments about things like the Patriot Act that we did in 2002? | ||
It's exactly the same arguments. | ||
Where people are going, hey, this is destroying our rights. | ||
This is total curtailment of our constitutionally protected Bill of Rights. | ||
Like, this is bad. | ||
They're justifying spying. | ||
They're justifying military action on U.S. soil. | ||
They're getting rid of habeas corpus and all these other lawful protections. | ||
Like, this is really bad. | ||
People go, well, it's for terrorists. | ||
You aren't on the side of terrorists, are you? | ||
You go, okay, but... | ||
There's nothing in this language that differentiates between a legitimate terrorist that's actually killing people and an anti-government activist who just wants to be left alone on a farm in Idaho. | ||
No differentiation legally between those two and without those very distinct and severe differences or like legal discrepancies, then you're opening the door for just total oppression of the American people. | ||
And the argument against that was, you're a terrorist if you don't support this. | ||
We're just in that same, in that exact same situation. | ||
I'm sitting here going, they're justifying arresting, they're not going after illegal, these are legal immigrants. | ||
These people that followed the system, that did it the right way. | ||
This woman has now been arrested and will likely face deportation or maybe imprisonment without a trial. | ||
Because she wrote an op-ed that criticized Israel. | ||
Because she, as they put it, quote, glorified and supported terrorists. | ||
Like, philosophically. | ||
Not literally, materially, tangibly, physically. | ||
Just emotionally. | ||
They supported terrorists. | ||
Now, I don't know how many Americans Hamas has killed. | ||
Maybe the crew can find that. | ||
How many Americans has Hamas killed? | ||
And how many of them were American on paper but lived in Israel and were in the IDF? | ||
I would like to know. | ||
I can't think of any time Hamas has attacked Americans. | ||
Am I missing an event? | ||
Has there been a time when Hamas has attacked Americans in America, on American soil? | ||
Nearly two dozen Americans have been killed in the Israeli Gaza War. | ||
Yeah, but how many of them were in the IDF? | ||
I don't think they count. | ||
They don't count as Americans. | ||
You can't say this is a terror test against Americans because Hamas killed Israeli soldiers. | ||
Okay. That's the frustration with this type of stuff. | ||
Hamas will kill an IDF soldier, most of whom served in the Israeli Defense Forces. | ||
Am I psychic, or is all of this obvious? | ||
23 American citizens, most of whom served in the Israeli Defense Forces, have been killed in the Israel-Gaza War since October 7th. | ||
Yeah, so some Israeli signs up for the army, is deployed to a battlefield. | ||
Yeah, 21 of them. | ||
So 23 have been killed. | ||
21 of them were serving the IDF. | ||
Alright, so not Americans. | ||
I'm going to say they're not Americans. | ||
When you're in the army of a... | ||
I know what your citizenship papers say. | ||
I get that you can have an American passport, but it seems to me like when you join the army of a different nation, it's kind of silly to call you a member of America. | ||
Kind of silly. | ||
Kind of silly to call you an American, but that's a very convenient talking point, I guess. | ||
So 23 Americans have died. | ||
21 of them were IDF members. | ||
Well, what were the other two? | ||
Hostages that were also IDF members? | ||
So I ask this question because I can point to things like the USS Liberty as to an example of a time when Israel directly killed American military men. | ||
An actual terrorist attack on America. | ||
I just want to be clear because when you're saying that a person can be arrested and deported for, quote, glorifying and supporting terrorists who kill Americans, I'd like to know who the terrorists are and whether they're actually killing Americans. | ||
Or whether this is in fact being done on behalf of a country who itself has killed far more Americans than Hamas ever has. | ||
And who now acts like the terror of the world, carrying out a genocide in full view of everybody. | ||
Do we not see a slippery slope when the justification for arresting and deporting somebody is glorifying and supporting? | ||
In other words, ideas, thoughts, they're thought crimes. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | |
There wasn't as many as there was a while. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
We'll get back to that footage of the Tufts University student who apparently has been arrested and is being deported for the crime of writing an op-ed about Israel. | ||
That's the country we live in now. | ||
I'm sad to see a lot of my fellow right-wingers going along with it. | ||
Like they can't see where it goes. | ||
Even though the trajectory is obvious. | ||
It's fine. | ||
It's fine. | ||
It's just Jewish fascism. | ||
We don't need to worry about it that much. | ||
It's just Jewish fascism. | ||
It's okay we live in a theocracy as long as it's Jewish. | ||
I guess. | ||
It's fine if our government behaves like a fascist government as long as it's doing it on behalf of a different government. | ||
Crazy. Totally crazy. | ||
That's where we are. | ||
We'll get back into that in just a minute. | ||
Meanwhile, top MS-13 leader arrested in Virginia. | ||
U.S. authorities have captured the MS-13 top leader for the U.S. East Coast. | ||
The FBI announced on Thursday officials captured the 24-year-old suspect in Woodbridge, Virginia, just south of Washington. | ||
D.C. authorities have yet to release the suspect's name. | ||
They say he's one of the top three leaders of the MS-13 gang in the U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Cash Patel watched the arrest unfold from a nearby tactical operations center. | ||
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and senior DOJ official Emile Bove were also present. | ||
Quote, they executed a clean, safe operation with the bad guys in custody, and thanks to the FBI, we got one of the worst of the worst of MS-13 off the streets this morning. | ||
Virginia and this country is a lot safer today, Bondi told Fox News following the arrest. | ||
The operation included the FBI joined by Prince William County Police Department, ATF Ice, and the Virginia State Police. | ||
And again, to me it's just kind of shocking that there's a leader of MS-13 in Virginia in the first place. | ||
But that's... | ||
Where our country's going, right? | ||
I mean, you import enough the third world, you become the third world. | ||
And places like Virginia, which to me inspires images of Monticello and Virginia's for lovers. | ||
And like valleys of trees changing color. | ||
A really beautiful American, classic Americana imagery. | ||
Now just has the... | ||
The infestation of foreign criminal gangs. | ||
Like a beautiful old Victorian house infested with ghouls. | ||
It's pretty annoying, actually, that we have to deal with any of this. | ||
And it makes that much more difficult to do anything. | ||
Let's go now to clip number three. | ||
This is Pam Bondi talking about the arrests in Virginia of hundreds. | ||
Of foreign criminals. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
What I want to do, I want to have other governors, other law enforcement officers come here to Virginia and see this amazing task force, Governor, that is led by our agencies and Governor Youngkin and what's happening here in Virginia. | ||
Arrests have increased 468% from the same period last year. | ||
We didn't need new laws, as President Trump always said. | ||
We needed a new president. | ||
And we have great leadership standing behind him to fight to keep America safe and make America safe again. | ||
We will keep your community safe, and we will continue to do that. | ||
So, very good to see. | ||
And then, Kristi Noem, and of course, the MS-13 gang is actually of El Salvadorian. | ||
And it's El Salvador that is handling our deportations now because El Salvador actually cleaned up its gang problem through concerted executive action. | ||
But also by putting everybody in its government under investigation. | ||
Do y'all remember the video of Nayib Bukele sitting down with his entire cabinet? | ||
And announcing to them, you are all under investigation for corruption. | ||
That is the type of action that we need here. | ||
I mean, honestly, if Bukele could run for president in America, I would vote for him. | ||
100%. And so we're sending MS-13 members and Trendy Aragua members to El Salvador to get the Bukele treatment. | ||
This, of course, is the subject of the stay by... | ||
Judge Boasberg, who demanded that the flight to be returned. | ||
That stay has now been upheld by an appeals court. | ||
We'll see what the Supreme Court has to say about it. | ||
But I don't like it. | ||
I don't like how they're invoking the Alien Enemies Act. | ||
Because I don't want it turned on me. | ||
I don't want it turned on me. | ||
I'm very much an enemy of this government. | ||
So I just personally, I guess personally for me, I'd rather not be sent to a prison in El Salvador without due process. | ||
And I really don't get why. | ||
I don't get, like, it's pretty standard practice that I have and I talk about on the show constantly. | ||
If the reason that they're giving for doing something isn't legitimate, then you have to figure out the other reason. | ||
So Trump can round these people up. | ||
He can deport these people. | ||
He can arrest them. | ||
He can deport them. | ||
He can put them on planes. | ||
I mean, it seems reasonable to me that if Joe Biden can fly them into the country, we can fly them out. | ||
I don't think you need to invoke the enemy alien act to do this. | ||
So why are they? | ||
Why are they setting the precedent for using wartime military police powers on American soil? | ||
Is the problem... | ||
Is it necessary? | ||
Is the problem that bad? | ||
That they have to do this? | ||
They have no other choice? | ||
Or is this a choice they're making on purpose for some ulterior motive? | ||
Because I don't get why this would be necessary. | ||
And maybe all of this is just to pave way for these same types of powers being used against American citizens. | ||
unidentified
|
you. | |
I don't get why they have to use these rules, and it's like, okay, then the judge intervenes. | ||
And then everybody on the right wing is like, oh, these Clinton judges, they're just biased. | ||
And they are, obviously. | ||
And they definitely are. | ||
But that all plays into it. | ||
But are they going to get the right wing to be the ones to go, yeah, well, the executive branch has the ability to arrest and imprison and disappear anybody. | ||
Doesn't matter if they're illegal. | ||
Yeah, a lawyer says he was disappeared. | ||
A gay Venezuelan makeup artist among hundreds deported without due process. | ||
I did think this one's funny because they don't actually, they say he was falsely accused of gang affiliations. | ||
I don't know if he was, though. | ||
I think most of this is predicated on the fact that he was gay. | ||
And they're like, but he's gay! | ||
And it's like, you can still be a gang member and a drug dealer if you're gay. | ||
That doesn't actually, it's not actually means he's innocent. | ||
And look, like I've said since the beginning, it's different if you're illegal. | ||
To me, it is different if you're illegal. | ||
If you're in this country without permission, I really don't care how they treat you, to be honest with you. | ||
You're like a fugitive. | ||
You're like, you're an invader. | ||
And sort of anything is on the table in terms of getting you out. | ||
Now, occasionally, I understand that a mistake would happen. | ||
Somebody gets arrested who is here legally and is maybe mistreated and it's kind of like, well, mistakes will happen. | ||
It wasn't on purpose and they'll be fine at the end of the day. | ||
But what they're doing now is arresting and deporting people who are here legally, who have our full permission to be here, who have not committed or been charged with a crime, have been here in some cases for decades. | ||
With permission, I remind you. | ||
Again, you know, there's these stories of like, this couple came to California 35 years ago, raised kids here, and now they're being deported. | ||
It's like, so for 35 years, they never bothered to even apply to be citizens. | ||
It's not an excuse. | ||
It's not like, well, they got away with it for 35 years, so now they get to stay. | ||
Like, no, America doesn't have squatters' rights. | ||
Doesn't matter how long you've been here. | ||
All that means to me is you've had 35 years to try to get legal status, and you haven't. | ||
So if you're illegal, you're illegal, you're not allowed here, you know you're not allowed here, you have no excuse. | ||
But if they can do it, people who are here legally, people who have been here their whole lives legally, as lawful, permanent residents, as green card holders, people who have done it the right way. | ||
Why could they not do this to American citizens? | ||
And what does our citizenship grant us if green card holders and lawful residents are being subjected to this? | ||
I feel like this is just the way they do it, right? | ||
It's the way it always gets done. | ||
And I'm just seeing a rehash of the Patriot Act, honestly. | ||
I'm just seeing a rehash of the Patriot Act where they create the conditions where they get to label a bunch of people terrorists and then they use that label to get the Americans, the conservatives, people who understand the Constitution and appreciate the Bill of Rights and support the founding principles. | ||
It's those people that they hijack and get to pass things like the Patriot Act to just utterly eviscerate All of our rights under the assumption and just like understanding that it's never going to be used against American citizens. | ||
But of course it's going to be used against American citizens. | ||
There's no reason why it wouldn't be used against American citizens. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
I don't know how people are going along with this. | ||
I really don't. | ||
It's very strange. | ||
So again, did they need to use the Alien Enemies Act to get this MS-13 guy? | ||
No? Okay, then why is he being used in other cases? | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
And if it's a wartime provision for enemy agents of a country that we are at war with, what country are we at war with that gives in this? | ||
Are we at war with Turkey? | ||
Because we just arrested a Turkish citizen. | ||
Are we at war with Korea? | ||
Because we just arrested a Korean National. | ||
And if not, then are these wartime provisions being used in peacetime, not against enemy combatants, but against lawful residents in this country? | ||
In which case, can you not see where this goes? | ||
Can you not see where this goes inevitably? | ||
I mean, I don't know. | ||
I'm just genuinely shocked that people aren't Horrified by what's happening these days. | ||
And literally the only reason people say is they're just like, shouldn't have been a terrorist. | ||
Or just like, I don't care. | ||
Foreigner, get out. | ||
And it's like, do you not see how they are so clearly hijacking your frustration that they created with the situation that they established? | ||
They flood your country with foreigners. | ||
They start a giant war in the Middle East. | ||
They carry out a genocide. | ||
The foreigners in your country that they brought start protesting. | ||
They say these are terrorists and we have to get them out. | ||
And because of the situation they created by flooding your country with foreigners that got you so mad and desperate for just some action somehow, now you're willing to go along with them arresting and deporting people for wrong think. | ||
And you're paving that way for them. | ||
Genuinely, I don't. | ||
When you can read things like, this is a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson answering to ABC News why a Tufts University PhD student was arrested for deportation, why she had her lawful green card, residency card revoked. | ||
And again, I mean, it's just these people. | ||
My God, they're so stupid. | ||
It's like... | ||
I may need to bring up some of the comments to this, but they're all basically the same. | ||
It's all just like, they're a foreigner, they need to get out. | ||
It's like, okay, you understand that the people in power are not going after any foreigner. | ||
The same people that are arresting this Turkish student for writing an op-ed that was anti-Israel are the same ones advocating for tens of millions of H-1B visas These aren't your friends. | ||
They aren't doing this because they're foreigners. | ||
They're hijacking your desperation to get you to go along with a suicidal policy that's intended in the future to justify military actions against American citizens for opposing Israel. | ||
That's all that's happening here. | ||
And I bet they'd go along with that too. | ||
I bet they'd go along with that too. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
You gotta be principled in this stuff. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
It just reminds me of what I was saying the other day where like – Thank you. | ||
I feel like the American public, they're just like toddlers. | ||
In the way that they're so easily tricked. | ||
And we don't like to think of ourselves like that, but like clearly, the majority of Americans are like toddler level understanding of what's going on. | ||
In the sense that like, you're trying to get your kid to do something. | ||
They're not doing it. | ||
You're yelling at them. | ||
You're trying to get them to do it. | ||
Trying to reason with it. | ||
Nothing gets through. | ||
And then you go, actually, it's a game. | ||
Actually, we're going to race. | ||
Right? Put your shoes on. | ||
Put your shoes on. | ||
Please. We got to go. | ||
Please. Just put your shoes on. | ||
Sit down. | ||
Put your shoes on. | ||
Nothing. Nothing. | ||
Nothing. Right? | ||
And it's like, oh, I bet I can put my shoes on faster than you. | ||
And they're like, no! | ||
And they just go and put their shoes on. | ||
And it's like... | ||
Because they're three. | ||
Because they're four years old. | ||
You can trick them like that, right? | ||
You'd think they'd grow out of it. | ||
You'd think at a certain point when you go, I'll race you to put your shoes on. | ||
They go, yeah, I know what you're doing. | ||
I know what you're doing here. | ||
You just want me to put my shoes on. | ||
And you think if you frame it as a game, I'm going to not understand what you're doing. | ||
Nice try, Dad. | ||
At a certain point, children rise to that level. | ||
The American public at large doesn't seem to have that ability. | ||
We're all falling for the... | ||
Who can put their shoes on the fastest game? | ||
Hey, we want to arrest people for wrong think. | ||
Hell no, this is America. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
Not going to happen. | ||
Okay, what if I call them terrorists? | ||
Well, get them! | ||
Arrest them now! | ||
Destroy them! | ||
Like, are you a child? | ||
Are you a toddler? | ||
Do you not see what they're doing? | ||
Do you not see how obvious this is? | ||
They can't just outright arrest people for thought crime in this country yet, right? | ||
But they're getting there. | ||
And you're helping them if you're going along with this. | ||
So they have to find ways to chip away at it. | ||
They have to find ways to expand the definition of terrorist. | ||
The definition of supporting terrorism. | ||
Does it mean monetary support? | ||
Well, it can mean spiritual support. | ||
It means that they posted about them positively online. | ||
Well, we can't just say that we're censoring people, so let's come up with all these definitions of disinformation and misinformation. | ||
And our side is going along with it, and it really is pathetic. | ||
So again, a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said that the reason this person was arrested... | ||
Was that DHS and ICE investigations, not looking into illegal immigrants, by the way, this person wasn't illegal, shouldn't cross the border. | ||
We had tens of millions of people cross the border in the last five years. | ||
Tens of millions of people came across our border in the last five years, almost all of which, we have their phone numbers, we gave them a ride to where they ended up, we know where they are. | ||
Can we take care of that first? | ||
Maybe this can be my offer of agreement here. | ||
I'll accept arresting college students for being anti-Israel, deporting lawful residents, despite the fact they didn't commit any crimes, because they aren't droolingly philo-Semitic. | ||
But on the condition that we get rid of all of the millions of people that flooded here illegally first. | ||
Can we do that? | ||
Can we agree on that? | ||
Because these people, these investigations going on, ICE is carrying out an investigation, Department of Homeland Security is carrying out an investigation. | ||
Who knows how many agents they have on it. | ||
During the arrest, you see like seven agents arresting this one woman. | ||
All of these people and all of this time and all of these resources. | ||
Somebody said to the thing about the woman getting deported for attending the protest. | ||
They're like, it's not a zero-sum game. | ||
It's like, no, it is. | ||
This is a zero-sum game. | ||
They have a finite limit of resources and agents where they can put their attention, where they can put their focus. | ||
They're not going after MS-13. | ||
Some of them are, obviously, but not anybody who's going after the Turkish medical student. | ||
Just insane. | ||
So, again, from the DHS, and this isn't me whitewashing it. | ||
This isn't me, like, claiming it doesn't matter. | ||
I mean, if you have somebody in this country that's, like, in communication with Hamas, and Hamas is giving them orders, and they're literally, like, sending them money or, you know, filing grants with the USAID to get, you know, money that's intended for condoms, really it's going to be spent on weapons. | ||
Like, if you actually have a case, then you can make that case. | ||
And I might be there with you. | ||
They're not making that case. | ||
The official DHX spokesman, when asked about why this arrest and deportation of a lawful student who hadn't committed a crime was happening, their reasoning was that glorifying terrorists is grounds for visa issuance being terminated. | ||
They get to define who terrorists are. | ||
They get to define what glorifying means. | ||
So what are they actually saying? | ||
What they're actually saying is that it's illegal to oppose Israel. | ||
Like, that's pretty much it. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
In the video of this girl getting arrested, again, I don't know how somebody can Be libertarian or conservative or MAGA or just genuinely American and not find it a bit chilling when you see a college student walking down the street being confronted by a bunch of masked men and women and all black who haul her away with | ||
no warrant, no criminal indictment. | ||
Video shows federal agents detain Tufts University PhD student Rumeza Ozturk. | ||
Yeah, papers please, ma'am. | ||
You're not hiding anti-Semites in the attic, are you? | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Come with us. | ||
Get on the train. | ||
I'm going to send you to a re-education camp. | ||
We will learn to appreciate the chosen people. | ||
You will learn about the biblical mandate for Israel to be given to Polish refugees? | ||
It gives a whole new meaning to papers, please. | ||
Papers, please? | ||
It's like, my ID? | ||
No, no, I need to see the paper you wrote about the conflict in the Middle East. | ||
You want the right side of that? | ||
I don't know how people can't see fascism when it's right there in front of you. | ||
I don't know if people think this is somehow done for the benefit of America. | ||
unidentified
|
See you again. | |
you again. | ||
I, you know, here she is taking away six agents, hauling away this woman who's not even illegal because she wrote an op-ed that was anti-Israel. | ||
They didn't accuse her of protesting. | ||
They didn't accuse her of violence. | ||
They didn't accuse her of coordinating or materially funding terrorism. | ||
They accused her of glorifying it. | ||
I think we may have just seen the first full-fledged thought crime arrest in America. | ||
The French are stirring the pot and demanding the Statue of Liberty back. | ||
A center-left French MEP, Raphael Glucksman, is throwing a tantrum, claiming America's gone rogue under Trump, siding with tyrants and torching the values that made Lady Liberty a gift worth giving in 1886. | ||
Glucksman says, we gave it to you as a gift, but apparently you despise it, so it'll be just fine here at home. | ||
Of course, the statue of Lady Liberty has come to represent everything the Trump administration is fighting for. | ||
And New York City already lost the Twin Towers. | ||
Lady Liberty is a bridge too far. | ||
unidentified
|
Video cameras caught trucks arriving at the World Trade Center from about August 23rd until every night until about September 2nd. | |
2nd, September 3rd. | ||
And the trucks were arriving at about 3 o'clock in the morning when everybody else had left the building, including the janitorial trucks. | ||
And the trucks were leaving at 5 a.m. right before the AAA personalities of Wall Street got to work to start their day. | ||
Something was brought into that building that would help with the detonation. | ||
There may have been work done on the detonation before. | ||
It may have been going on for months, but whatever they needed at the very... | ||
At the very end, they came and broadened that 10-day period. | ||
That's what we think happened. | ||
The airplane hijackings were a cover for the controlled demolition, which was undertaken by a small group of people, probably just four or five people. | ||
We are never going to know who they are, and it's not worth looking for them. | ||
And in August of 2001, I was told to stay out of New York City because the attack was considered imminent. | ||
We expected mass casualties and a possible miniature thermonuclear strike bomb. | ||
However, I want to be very clear. | ||
The attack was always defined as airplane hijackings and a strike on the World Trade Center. | ||
It isn't a symbol of globalism to the majority of Americans, as Glucksman appears to have twisted its meaning in his tiny Trump derangement syndrome brain. | ||
But Glucksman has raised a nagging question. | ||
The Statue of Liberty was designed by French Freemason Auguste Bartholdi and gifted it. | ||
In 1884, perched atop a star fort, bathed in the glow of the moon and stars, stands the Statue of Liberty, a monument dripping with occult fingerprints. | ||
That torch blazing in her hand, as intended by its creator, it's no beacon of freedom to him. | ||
It's the flame of forbidden knowledge handed down by Lucifer himself to keep his cult alive and kicking. | ||
Her left foot shackled tight, That wasn't a symbol of slavery to Bartholdi. | ||
It was a silent nod to the Creator's wrath, chaining those fallen angels in hell for spawning their freakish human-angel hybrids. | ||
From day one, there was a spiritual battle over this new Atlantis. | ||
Many powerful families hid in the shadows intending on America being Satan's playground. | ||
And when those European immigrants rolled in, bleary-eyed and hopeful, the first thing staring them down was this towering idol, Lucifer and Drag. | ||
The whore of Babylon welcoming them to the land of the devil's colony. | ||
The French didn't just hand us a statue. | ||
They slipped us a coded relic of their revolutionary occultism. | ||
So yeah, Glucksman, as much as the statue has come to represent precisely what we are now fighting for, its original sentiment was as perverse as the globalist hellhole you currently shoot your mouth from. | ||
John Bound reporting for InfoWars. | ||
That is the latest from John Bowne. | ||
You can find it and share that video at Infowars.com, bandad video, and of course, on X. And you can support us in everything that we do by going to thealexjonesstore.com, thealexjonesstore.com, your one-stop shop for supplements, health, and patriotic merchandise. | ||
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Very cool coin. | ||
Get yours today. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm going to go to a video now. | ||
His friend of the show, pedophile hunter Alex Rosen, was arrested. | ||
Last night. | ||
He was arrested last night in Florida, I understand. | ||
Brianna Morello was able to reach out and actually get in contact with him where he told the story how he ended up arrested. | ||
Let's go down to clip number one. | ||
This is Alex Rosen talking about being arrested while busting a pedophile. | ||
For the second time, the same guy busted twice, and it's Alex Rosen who gets arrested. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
Call connected. | |
This call is being recorded and has a maximum call length of five minutes. | ||
Hello? Hello, my friend. | ||
What's going on? | ||
Well, um... | ||
Well, don't say too much because I don't want you criminally charged with anything. | ||
Remember, it's a recorded line. | ||
Right, right, right. | ||
Okay. So, we caught this pedo for the second time today. | ||
We caught him first in October and he was arrested, but it looks like they did not follow through with charges, unfortunately. | ||
Predictably, he reoffends, as they all do, whether they get shorted or not. | ||
And he messaged another one of our decoy accounts in February and, you know, pretty much identical messages. | ||
He sent me in his pictures. | ||
He says, I've always wanted to be a 13-year-old. | ||
And, you know, he asked to meet up multiple times. | ||
And today he wasn't trying to meet up, but we went to his job today where he works. | ||
Is it our fast food joint? | ||
Yeah, it was a steak and shake in Branson, Missouri. | ||
And, you know, usually the second time around, I don't like to talk as much as the first time, I'm sure as you can imagine. | ||
So, you know, I think he saw me from behind. | ||
I think he saw me from the kitchen at the counter. | ||
I was trying to hide my face a little bit, but, you know, I kind of stick out like a sore thumb. | ||
Yeah. Yeah, so I asked the employees, hey, can you bring Joshua over here? | ||
And they're like, oh, he's busy. | ||
Like, basically, you know, in the nicest way possible to kick rocks. | ||
And, you know, so I talked in a very loud voice in the restaurant. | ||
And, you know, I didn't read through any graphic messages because there were kids in there. | ||
But I did read a message talking about how he wanted to date a 13-year-old. | ||
And I mentioned a very loud voice that this place is employing a pedophile. | ||
And, you know, obviously the owner wasn't too happy about me doing that, understandably. | ||
And, you know, I just said that I'd wait for the cops to come. | ||
And the cops came. | ||
And we just told him, like, hey, you know, same guy in October. | ||
Obviously the situation was different because he admitted to a lot of things, including molesting a 12-year-old, which is really sad I didn't look into it Disgusting. After talking to both parties, I guess not the pedophile at that point, they ended up arresting me for disturbing the peace. | ||
And they ended up, you know, obviously trespassing me from the restaurant. | ||
But the good news is I just heard that they did end up taking in the pedo as well. | ||
So, you know, it was like a kamikaze mission. | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
I flew my plane into the aircraft here and we both exploded. | ||
Well, I love you for that. | ||
But here's the thing. | ||
Why are they still holding you if they already know what the charges are? | ||
Do you know why? | ||
Well, so basically the cops decided on scene to press charges, and there's a 24-hour hold. | ||
So the prosecuting attorney basically has the final say in whether charges are pressed within these 24 hours or to let me go without charges pressed, and they have a year to end up pressing charges on it. | ||
So, you know, hopefully I just get out as soon as possible because I don't think that, you know, especially with him being arrested now, I'm a lot more optimistic that I'm probably going to be all right. | ||
Yeah. Yeah, but jail fucking sucks, so I definitely learned a lesson today to not raise my voice around older people. | ||
Yeah, I mean, that's absurd, though. | ||
Is this the pedo who's a crossdresser? | ||
Yes, the crossdresser. | ||
That's correct. | ||
Okay. Okay. | ||
And anything else? | ||
Like, what can I do for you right now? | ||
Well, you know, I would put out to your large audience that I am in jail, but also the pedo is in jail. | ||
You know, give rancid PD props for being hard asses to everybody, which, you know, I'd rather that happen than, you know, him not be in jail. | ||
So it's not the worst case scenario. | ||
But, yeah, I mean, I don't think any of your audience is necessarily calling the jail, but a lot of mine is. | ||
And they're, you know, giving shit to the CEOs for no reason. | ||
Because, you know, the CEOs are very nice, and obviously they're not the ones charging people. | ||
All right. | ||
I'm going to reach out to a couple people, the state AG as well, just to make sure to get you out as quick as possible, see if someone responds. | ||
But if you need anything, you have my number. | ||
Call me. | ||
Okay. I'll probably call you sometime tonight and just see what's up. | ||
Cool. All right. | ||
I'll be around. | ||
All right. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you, Alex. | ||
That's going to hang up on us soon. | ||
All right. | ||
Yeah. Three, Alex Rosen, Brandon Morello, absolutely killing it. | ||
I'm loving these Studio Ghibli. | ||
Meme recreations. | ||
Yeah, Brianna Morello, seriously, just superstar in the sector and staying on top of this. | ||
Hopefully we'll see Alex Rosen out again. | ||
But it's troubling and telling the fact that he can arrest somebody or he can help, you know, participate in the arrest of somebody caught chatting up 13-year-olds. | ||
They get let out and, of course, just do it again immediately. | ||
Pretty troubling stuff. | ||
And I want to go to a few videos here. | ||
As I promised earlier, and I don't know if I have a particular thing to relate this to today. | ||
More of just an overall sense of shock that I felt when I'm watching this show. | ||
From the UK. | ||
From the early 80s. | ||
I think it must be from the early 80s. | ||
Crew, can look up the show Yes Minister. | ||
And I'm dropping the videos in right now. | ||
Whenever we pull them in, I'll go to them. | ||
Because it must be the early 80s or late 70s. | ||
It's long enough ago, and this was the first thing I noticed. | ||
I didn't actually grab this clip, but there are scenes. | ||
It must be the late 70s when this is happening. | ||
When they're talking about smoking. | ||
1980? Okay. | ||
So in 1980, there were still moments when sequel Yes, Prime Minister. | ||
Maybe that's what I'm talking about. | ||
Yes, Prime Minister. | ||
Where they're talking about smoking and the characters keep going, there's been no conclusive scientific study that's shown smoking is unhealthy. | ||
There's no scientific study that showed that conclusively. | ||
Of course, the other character's like, well, it's because you've never done the study. | ||
And they're like, yes, well, it still doesn't exist. | ||
And that to me was amazing, because how many things in our life are like that? | ||
There's no conclusive study to show autism is caused by vaccines. | ||
Well, yeah, but there hasn't been one done. | ||
It's amazing to think that as early as 1980s, There were still people out there that were trying to claim that smoking didn't cause cancer because the science hadn't been done. | ||
There's just stuff like that where I'm like, man, that's weirdly pertinent. | ||
That's weirdly, it's like it's satirizing the modern world. | ||
It's about smoking 50 years ago, and we can recognize it as absurd now because it would be absurd for anybody today. | ||
To say, well, there's no proof smoking causes cancer. | ||
There's no proof smoking lowers life expectancy. | ||
So it just goes to show the control of the scientific community and the way that industries weaponize it. | ||
But I'm watching this episode yesterday. | ||
I think it was the sixth episode of the first season. | ||
And there were some hilarious but bizarre crossovers from the modern world to the early 80s. | ||
And it's another example of just like, hey, I'm not looking for it, but Israel is everywhere. | ||
I know. | ||
I know what you're thinking. | ||
I'm talking about a sitcom from the UK in the 80s. | ||
Surely I can't be relating this to Israel somehow, but it wasn't me. | ||
Trust me. | ||
They did it. | ||
So the first clip. | ||
So, okay, so the story is basically this. | ||
You have a new prime minister in the UK. | ||
He's very vain. | ||
He's very kind of stupid. | ||
And he is basically just controlled by the civil service, the permanent deep state of the UK. | ||
And the whole, like all of the drama in the episodes is about how they manipulate the prime minister. | ||
And there's constantly manipulating him, constantly keeping information from him, feeding him certain information, playing to his ego to get what they want. | ||
And I seriously think this would be, if Daily Wire wasn't going down in flames, This would be the thing that they should produce. | ||
If InfoWars can get out from under the bankruptcy, I think it'd be well worth it to dedicate the time and energy to creating a modern remake of Yes Minister. | ||
Yes Mr. President. | ||
It could be called. | ||
And you'll see why when I show you these clips. | ||
We'll start with the first one that says YM Israel. | ||
So again, just sort of the... | ||
Funny, but a little bit of a twist, too. | ||
A little bit of a difference. | ||
You know, the 1980s wasn't that long ago. | ||
But you'll notice that Britain seems to have reorganized its foreign policy prerogatives. | ||
Let's go to the first clip. | ||
YM Israel. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, well, the Arabs have put down a motion of the United Nations condemning Israel. | |
Naturally, we'll be voting on the Arab side. | ||
Oh, naturally. | ||
But I gather that the PM wants us to abstain. | ||
Oh, surely not. | ||
Why? Well, something about the PLO starting at this time, false on both sides. | ||
The usual sentimental nonsense. | ||
Sucking up to the Americans as wards. | ||
As far as foreign affairs are concerned, his job is to confine himself to the hospitality and ceremonial room. | ||
I'll do my best. | ||
But you know what happens when politicians get into number 10? | ||
They want to take their place on the world stage. | ||
People on stages are called actors. | ||
All they're required to do is look plausible, stay sober, and say the lines they're given in the right way. | ||
Some of them try to make up their own lines. | ||
Don't last long. | ||
Yes, they don't last long, and they try to bring their own. | ||
So, like, the whole point of this show, and part of it, I think, is, like, deep subversion, where it's, like, presenting the deep state as good, even though they're all kind of goofy. | ||
But that just gives you a little taste of, like, prime ministers, they can't interfere with our greater designs. | ||
They're just worried about popularity. | ||
They need to worry about what's happening. | ||
By Friday, not centuries from now. | ||
That's the point in this next clip as well. | ||
Yeah, 327. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
Anything else? | |
Yes, I gather we're proposing to vote against Israel and the UN tonight. | ||
Of course. | ||
Why? They bombed the PLO. | ||
The PLO bombed Israel. | ||
Yes, but the Israelis dropped more bombs than the PLO. | ||
No, they didn't. | ||
Well, anyway, it seems to be the faults on both sides. | ||
Well, not according to my advice. | ||
Well, the Americans are worried about it. | ||
They want us to abstain tonight. | ||
Oh, I don't think we could do that. | ||
Why not? | ||
Well, the Foreign Office wouldn't wear it. | ||
Are they here to follow our instructions, or are we here to follow them? | ||
Now, don't be silly. | ||
The more things change, the more they stay the same. | ||
Are you exhausted yet? | ||
Are you exhausted yet? | ||
The conversation about who's at fault between Israel and Palestine, the conversation has been going on for 55 years, the exact same conversation over and over. | ||
Well, they started it. | ||
Well, they dropped more bombs. | ||
Well, no, they didn't. | ||
It's just like, oh, my God. | ||
How long? | ||
How long is this conflict going to be central in the Western democracies? | ||
And, of course, the important question there, do we tell them what to do or do they tell us? | ||
That's a good question. | ||
And actually, this... | ||
Again, I think this would just be a brilliant thing to remake with the American Deep State. | ||
Actually explaining to other Deep State members why it's so important that they pull the wool over the eyes of politicians. | ||
This next clip is a bit longer and they actually get into the reasoning. | ||
And again, I just think it's fascinating that 50 years ago they were writing this. | ||
35, 40 years ago they were writing this. | ||
And how so little has changed. | ||
And how applicable it all still is. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's go to the next clip Of course we made them real mistake 20 years ago when we gave them their independence Don't you think I was right, wind of change and all that? | |
Yes, but not the way we did it. | ||
We should have partitioned the island. | ||
Oh, you mean like we did in India and Cyprus and Palestine and Ireland? | ||
Yes, that was our invariable practice when we gave independence to the colonies. | ||
It always worked. | ||
Didn't partition always lead to civil war? | ||
It did in India and Cyprus and Palestine and Ireland. | ||
Yes, but it kept them busy. | ||
Instead of fighting other people, they confined themselves to fighting each other. | ||
Yes, they're rather good, that. | ||
They're just having a policy about them. | ||
*laughter* *laughs* | ||
I think these are the conversations that happen. | ||
I don't think this is even, like, entertainment. | ||
I think this is just a hidden camera. | ||
And 10 Downing Street. | ||
We should have partitioned the colony. | ||
And literally pointing out that of all the colonies that got freedom from the UK, those that were partitioned ended up going to war, basically being in civil war for the next several decades. | ||
And the UK's like, yeah, that's what we should have done with all of them. | ||
That was very convenient for us. | ||
We didn't have to have a policy about them. | ||
We didn't have to worry about them. | ||
We just split the country in half and have it go to war with itself. | ||
Very convenient. | ||
It's like you got two options. | ||
You either go the Alex Jones style of just raging and just being like, they split the population against each other, they have each other fight each other so they can keep going and doing what they want without, and it's like it's the exact same argument as, we just have the two of them fight each other, then we get to continue with business as usual. | ||
It's like, I think both of these equally, Incisive, equally as enlightening when it comes to decisions being made from on high. | ||
Now here's the longer clip where they break down the reasoning as to exactly why politicians can't be trusted with things like politics. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
St. George's. | |
What now? | ||
Well, the PM seems to be completely in the dark. | ||
Good. Excellent. | ||
Anything else? | ||
Well, I wondered if there was anything he doesn't know. | ||
Well, I hardly know where to begin, Bernard. | ||
No, I mean anything important. | ||
Well, he has the Foreign Secretary to tell him. | ||
Yes, I know, but he seems to think the Foreign Secretary doesn't know the whole story either. | ||
I should hope not. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Are you implying that the Prime Minister ought to know what's happening? | ||
Well, he is the Prime Minister. | ||
Yes, Bernard, but it's simply too dangerous to let politicians become involved with diplomacy. | ||
Diplomacy is about surviving until the next century. | ||
Politics is about surviving until Friday afternoon. | ||
There are 157 independent countries in the world. | ||
We've dealt with them for years. | ||
There's hardly an MP who knows anything about any of them. | ||
Show them a map of the world. | ||
Most of them have a job finding the Isle of Wight. | ||
Politicians can't be that ignorant. | ||
Very well. | ||
Sit down, Bernard. | ||
Where is the upper volta? | ||
What's the capital of Chad? | ||
What language do they speak in Mali? | ||
The president of Peru. | ||
What is the national religion of Cameroon? | ||
Bernard? You should stand for Parliament. | ||
What I mean is, if it's a democracy, shouldn't people sort of discuss things a bit? | ||
Of course, full discussion. | ||
And shouldn't they have the facts? | ||
Of course not. | ||
They don't want them. | ||
Facts complicate things. | ||
All that the press, the people and their elected leaders want to know is who are the goodies and who are the baddies. | ||
The problem is that the interests of Britain always involve doing deals with people that the public think are the baddies. | ||
And not helping the goodies occasionally when it doesn't help us. | ||
So we avoid discussion of foreign affairs. | ||
Or rather we keep all discussion inside the foreign office. | ||
Then we produce one policy for the foreign secretary which represents our considered view. | ||
And he can act upon it. | ||
No options? | ||
No. No alternatives? | ||
No. What if he's not satisfied? | ||
Well, if pressed, we look at it again. | ||
And come up with a different view? | ||
Of course not. | ||
We come up with the same view. | ||
But what if he demands auction? | ||
Well, it's obvious, Bernard. | ||
The Foreign Office will happily present him with three options, two of which are, on close inspection, exactly the same. | ||
Plus a third, which is totally unacceptable. | ||
Like bombing Warsaw or invading France. | ||
Bitter still, we occasionally encourage the Foreign Secretary to produce his own policy. | ||
Then we tell him that it will inevitably lead to World War III, perhaps within 48 hours. | ||
I see. | ||
I'm sorry to appear stupid. | ||
Oh. Perish the thought, Bernard. | ||
But in my experience, ministers are somewhat concerned about the effect of policy on domestic political opinion. | ||
Now, our system doesn't seem to allow for that. | ||
Of course not. | ||
We take the global view. | ||
We ask what's best for the world. | ||
Well, most ministers would rather you ask, what's the Daily Mail leader going to say? | ||
Oh, Bernard, we can't have foreign policy made by yobbos like Fleet Street editors or backbench MPs. | ||
Or cabinet ministers. | ||
Or cabinet ministers. | ||
We take the right decisions and let them sort out the politics later. | ||
Again, I don't have anything specific to relate this to, but I don't know if I've ever seen a better or more accurate portrayal of the actual thought processes of the deep state ever. | ||
Just the way they can so casually disregard the democracy that they simultaneously uphold as sacred. | ||
Disturbing. BBC quietly removes Yes Minister episode because it's problematic to mention Israel. | ||
Yeah. Things were a little different then. | ||
The whole episode's interesting. | ||
It's all about Israel and it's Israel. | ||
It was probably that episode that was removed. | ||
Because basically the Israeli ambassador is feeding information to the Prime Minister to get him to make decisions. | ||
It's all about East Yemen. | ||
Staging a communist revolution. | ||
You know, this is in the height of the Cold War. | ||
So there's the extra layer of the Soviets infiltrating everything. | ||
But hey, things haven't changed, have they? | ||
Things really haven't changed, have they? | ||
Israel still at war. | ||
Communists still infiltrating. | ||
The deep state still making decisions as what's best for the globe, not what's best for America or Britain or any other country where they're supposed to have their priorities. | ||
And again, I guess this is just my call to action. | ||
Who wants to make a new TV show? | ||
Who wants to make an American version of Yes Minister called Yes President where you basically have exactly the same plots and the same dialogue from the UK in the 1970s because things are exactly the same? | ||
And I feel like if nothing else, it should at least make you realize kind of like what... | ||
What Trump is up against, honestly. | ||
Because it's exactly the same thing here, and you see exactly how it's justified, right? | ||
Well, politicians are just trying to be popular. | ||
We're trying to figure out what's best for the globe. | ||
They don't need to know the answer to all of these things. | ||
That's what we're here. | ||
It's actually a burden on us that we have to do all of this work for them. | ||
And they get to go play their popularity contest, and we get to decide the course and direction of history. | ||
And that it's just still that exact thing. | ||
And again, just that line, that line is what made me want to grab these clips. | ||
When he says, we take a more global view. | ||
We're more concerned about what's best for the globe. | ||
And it's like, how is it that a comedy sitcom from BBC from the early 80s has a better grasp on the way geopolitics operates and the way politics itself operates? | ||
Than modern Americans with practically live-streamed, permanent, 24-7 access to every politician. | ||
So it's just... | ||
When we are involved in politics, and Donald Trump is the one, like, destroying that structure, which is why we support him. | ||
Before that, we aren't fighting against politicians. | ||
We're fighting against those deep state controllers that you saw there. | ||
Welcome back, folks. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll be joined in the next hour by Raw Egg Nationalists. | |
We're talking a lot about what he's in town for. | ||
In fact, I think on that note, because I believe he's in town for a conference called NatalCon. | ||
It's all about increasing the birth rate and actually celebrating a pro-life mindset where you encourage people to have kids. | ||
And ideally, Create the economic circumstances for which having children is a possibility. | ||
So I want to go to a video now of some people in Colorado, clip number 11, making a sort of novel argument in favor of abortion. | ||
I've heard lots of different arguments in favor of abortion. | ||
This one might be the most sickening yet. | ||
Let's go now to clip number 11. That savings comes from the averted births that will not occur because abortions happened instead. | ||
So a birth is more expensive than an abortion. | ||
So the savings comes in Medicaid births that will not occur. | ||
This bill will actually decrease costs for our healthcare policy and financing department, our Medicaid expenditures, in both this year and out years, as the savings from averted births outweigh the cost of covering reproductive healthcare for all Coloradans. | ||
This bill requires all abortion services to be state funded. | ||
The bill requires an increase to general fund of $1.5 million to cover the cost for care. | ||
But again, a reminder that ultimately the state will see a cost savings. | ||
And ultimately, it is truly an honor to be here carrying this bill alongside Rep. | ||
Garcia. And I ask for your support of Senate Bill 183. | ||
That's right, folks. | ||
Killing a baby is... | ||
Actually cheaper than raising one. | ||
This argument brought to you by hell itself and Satan's mind. | ||
Cheaper to, and of course this reminds you of the headline from CBC, that's the Canadian version of BBC, the Canadian Broadcasting Company. | ||
Medically assisted deaths could save millions in healthcare spending. | ||
What type of mind comes up with this type of argument? | ||
You know what's cheaper than keeping people alive? | ||
Killing them. | ||
Yeah, great point. | ||
I'd like to... | ||
I really would like to see the person make this argument in the first place. | ||
I mean, I guess we just did. | ||
But the way it's phrased is maybe a little bit disguising the reality. | ||
If I come to you and say, I have an idea of how we could save 138... | ||
I'm like, oh my gosh, thank goodness. | ||
What do you got for us? | ||
I'm like, why don't we just kill the sick people? | ||
Why don't we just kill the people that are costing us money and then we can save the money. | ||
We can fund more transgender operations. | ||
We can fund, you know, excavations of churches where there aren't any bodies. | ||
We can spend the billions upon billions of dollars on other things. | ||
That make everything worse. | ||
We can save that money with the simple act of murder. | ||
It's so convenient. | ||
Why didn't we think of this before? | ||
People cost money. | ||
There were less people. | ||
That cost less money. | ||
I never thought of it that way. | ||
All of you parents out there feel pretty stupid, huh? | ||
You're spending money on books and clothes and shoes. | ||
Toys. Doctors visits. | ||
Do you know that you can actually cover all of those costs? | ||
Save all of that money by simply tearing the child apart with metal tongs? | ||
And then you can sell the body and actually make money. | ||
We actually have a way of taking the miracle of childbirth from being a negative in the expense columns to being a positive. | ||
Not only will you save money by murdering your children, you can butcher the children and sell them like meat and make money through abortion. | ||
So as a fiscally responsible conservative, I say slaughter the children. | ||
We're just going to kill them. | ||
It's so simple. | ||
It's so easy. | ||
It's so cheap. | ||
Murder. The solution to all of your budget woes. | ||
Isn't that convenient? | ||
Now they actually made that argument. | ||
They are legitimately making the argument that preserving life is more expensive than ending it. | ||
So therefore, we should end it. | ||
At the end of life or the beginning, those are where the savings really come in. | ||
If you kill something before it even has a chance to draw breath, then you're saving a lifetime of expenses by murdering the baby. | ||
And then at the end of life, it takes a lot of money to keep people alive for a couple extra years. | ||
Inject them with a little bit of arsenic. | ||
And that's cheap. | ||
I mean, that's a 50 cent injection. | ||
Hell, how much does a bullet cost? | ||
Right? I mean, if you really want to save a bunch of money, you could let tons of people starve to death. | ||
That's even better. | ||
We are in... | ||
The modest proposal reality. | ||
But why do they even have to be sick? | ||
Like, if they're just a drain on the economy, let's eliminate them. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
Cut off the welfare. | ||
Cut off their access to funds. | ||
Let them starve to death and eat each other. | ||
Total savings, 100% recouping of costs. | ||
It's incredible. | ||
Like, do you have any idea how much money we could save by killing the Untermensch? | ||
Do you have any idea the cost savings that could be accrued? | ||
And I mean, you could take this to the extreme. | ||
How much money could we save if no babies were ever born again? | ||
That's the real, that's where the real savings kick in. | ||
What if we killed every baby? | ||
Can you imagine the cost savings that we could accrue? | ||
We don't have to pay doctors to deliver babies. | ||
We don't have to pay for toys. | ||
I mean, there's an entire industry supported by the existence of babies. | ||
And I mean, look, frankly, babies, they're just a capitalistic trick. | ||
Capitalism tricked us into thinking that babies are good. | ||
That's what I've learned from the YouTubers that I watch. | ||
They told me that... | ||
It's actually before capitalism. | ||
Humans didn't make babies. | ||
We didn't have that unnatural drive. | ||
It was capitalism that tricked people into wanting babies. | ||
Why? Because what happens when you have a baby? | ||
You've got to buy them clothes. | ||
They don't stay that small. | ||
They grow, and within a couple months, you're having to buy new clothes. | ||
That means you're having to buy new products. | ||
Get it? | ||
Consumerism. You have to be a constant consumer, constantly buying new products as your babies grow. | ||
You have to buy them whole sorts of toys, and they grow out of those toys. | ||
It's a capitalist trick, folks. | ||
It's a trick of capitalism to keep you constantly purchasing things for your baby as it grows, your child as it grows. | ||
The healthcare, the food spending. | ||
It's a trick to get you to buy things. | ||
You can save money and be a good communist by eliminating... | ||
Children, childhood, making babies. | ||
Frankly, I think we should be putting sterilization agents in our pesticides so that these crops that we grow have a little bit of a diminished chance of getting pregnant. | ||
I think we can lower fertility across the board through an infusion of microplastics and hormone-altering, estrogen-mimicking pesticides. | ||
Do you have any idea how much money we could save? | ||
Do you have any idea? | ||
Now, you know, your son might be a little upset when you trick him into getting a vasectomy. | ||
You just have to let him know, I'm doing it for your own good. | ||
You castrate your son or sterilize your daughter. | ||
They might find that as some sort of imposition on their freedom, right? | ||
Some sort of vile act of mutilation. | ||
So you have to explain to them how much money they're going to save. | ||
Because that's all that matters at the end of the day. | ||
So again, whether it's the beginning of life and aborting the baby, or the end of life and murdering the old people, the fact is that in the modern world, the incredibly difficult economic circumstances that the government has put us in require the government to support. | ||
The murdering of inconvenient people who are just a drain on our books. | ||
I mean, after all, if you can wholesale replace a population with a different population, you can genocide all of Ireland and replace them with Africans and Pakistanis. | ||
Is that not just sort of an outgrowth, an extension of this type of thought? | ||
After all, is the economy there to serve the people or are the people there to serve the economy? | ||
If the people are there to serve the economy, then replace them all with migrants. | ||
If the people are there to serve the economy, then their mere existence is a drain on the economy, then they need to be killed for the sake of the economy. | ||
Save the planet, kill yourself, save the economy, kill yourself! | ||
Don't fall into that capitalistic trap of fulfilling your biological imperative. | ||
I don't know if I've talked about it much on this show. | ||
I've tweeted about it a little bit, but there are things that I hear, and I'll be watching some YouTube. | ||
I'm just cleaning, and I've got YouTube playing in the background. | ||
It's just some video about Lord of the Rings or something. | ||
I don't know, whatever. | ||
It's like a movie commentary. | ||
And these YouTubers, they have the funniest things they think are tricks of capitalism. | ||
I heard one person going on, and these aren't like political people, right? | ||
This is how deeply saturated our culture is in this type of thinking. | ||
Where it's people like, you know, the reason Americans eat so much meat is because of an ad campaign in the 1950s. | ||
Like, you think Americans like meat because they were tricked? | ||
You think that capitalism tricked them into liking steak? | ||
That's how worse people's minds are. | ||
Like, they literally think the most natural, normal things in the world are like a trick to make money. | ||
Another person saying that hunting. | ||
Hunting was just a trick. | ||
Hunting was just a, there was an ad campaign in the 50s, again, about hunting. | ||
And that's why Americans hunt. | ||
They think they're participating in some sort of ancestral pastime. | ||
But in reality, nobody hunted for sport before the 1950s when an ad company wanted to sell guns. | ||
It's like you can only believe these things if you are utterly ignorant of all of human history. | ||
Which is convenient because they are. | ||
They are utterly... | ||
Completely ignorant of what life was like before the 1990s. | ||
They have absolutely no idea, no curiosity, no interest in it. | ||
But they are willing to believe that everybody previously was just being tricked. | ||
And we're the only enlightened ones. | ||
We understand everything. | ||
Nobody in the past understood anything. | ||
And that's why history needs to be destroyed. | ||
Not to trick people into thinking that the past was good or anything. | ||
So yeah, I'm... | ||
I wouldn't be surprised if they're making the argument that having children was some sort of capitalistic trick to sell baby toys. | ||
And, you know, the reason I'm bringing that up is because, like, even if you could make the, I mean, they did make the argument, we just saw it, as unbelievable as it sounds, they're actually making the argument that child care, health care, Delivering a baby is more expensive than killing it, therefore we should have abortion. | ||
They actually made that argument. | ||
If you actually look at the economy holistically, a baby is a generator of prosperity. | ||
Every baby that's born guarantees like a thousand jobs. | ||
Because they do. | ||
They need a lot of stuff. | ||
They need a lot of care. | ||
They need a lot of... | ||
Clothes and food and cribs and strollers and all this sort of stuff that you only need because babies are constantly being born and the goods only last a few years. | ||
So it's one of those things that's like, okay, if you take this to its logical end, if we actually had nothing but abortions and no live births, And you did that for the sake of the economy, the entire economy would crash and grind to a halt, and there would be a cascading effect of all of the businesses that are supported by the existence of babies goes away. | ||
It's like they, it's not even an actual argument. | ||
It's not even a real argument. | ||
But this is the only reason this argument makes any sense at all, is because so many people rely wholly on the government. | ||
Wouldn't be a concern if people could actually afford the choices that they make. | ||
But they can't. | ||
They have 12 babies out of wedlock with no job, no support structure. | ||
Suddenly the government is on the hook to pay for all of their children. | ||
Now we can't afford it. | ||
Now the budget's not balancing. | ||
Now they're pushing abortion to try to balance the budget. | ||
None of that would be an issue if the government had nothing to do with this and these lives. | ||
But it's the exact same argument that is made for replacing the entire population of countries because it's better for the economy. | ||
So that's really the principal question at the heart of this issue. | ||
Do we exist for the economy or does the economy exist for us? | ||
And if we're limiting our births for the sake of the economy, we're destroying our lives for the sake of the economy, And I think maybe we need to get rid of the economy. | ||
I don't know how you do that, but we do. | ||
Anyway, just sickening, disgusting, horrific mindset of these people in our country. | ||
It really is messed up. | ||
By the way, since we're on the topic of the UK earlier, I thought this was a joke. | ||
I thought this was a parody. | ||
But it's not, apparently. | ||
Keir Starmer, Prime Minister of England, of the UK, just posted this. | ||
Confirmed, ninja swords will be banned by this summer. | ||
When we promise action, we take it. | ||
Ninja swords will be banned by this summer. | ||
In the UK. | ||
Because when I look at... | ||
This is part of why I thought it was a joke. | ||
I thought somebody was telling me they were going to ban my samurai swords. | ||
unidentified
|
Are there weapons of war? | |
Apparently. Apparently they're weapons of war. | ||
It's also hilarious. | ||
They specified ninja swords. | ||
Like, what? | ||
So if I have a Roman sword, it's okay? | ||
Just ninja swords? | ||
Ninja. Okay. | ||
She says, knife crime is at epidemic levels and is ruining lives across Britain. | ||
As Prime Minister, I'll crack down on the sale of these lethal weapons once and for all. | ||
Because when I look around the UK, when I see the miserable state of abject tyranny, economic collapse, cultural chaos, I can look at the UK and I can find one major glaring problem above all and that is novelty samurai swords. | ||
When I look around the UK and I see their collapsing economy and I see them readying for World War 3 with Russia and I see mobs of Muslims wandering the streets with metal bars beating up every white people they see while all of the white people are being arrested and thrown into jail for three years for Posting an article on Facebook. | ||
I think I know what solves this problem. | ||
I know what can cut this Gordian knot. | ||
Although, I don't know. | ||
Can I use that phrase anymore? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, to use a sword to slice through rope, is that really the type of message we want to be sending to UK kids? | ||
So, so far, because of the endless importation of millions upon millions, Of culturally incompatible extremists from overseas because of the knife crime and the terrorist bombings and the attempted bombings, the pressure cooker that was found in a hospital three days ago. | ||
The UK has identified the overwhelming concerns. | ||
It's misogyny on the internet and novelty samurai swords. | ||
Couldn't possibly be the influx of millions of violent extremist men. | ||
Couldn't possibly be the crackdown and clampdown on free speech, leaving the populace incapable of even understanding, let alone dealing with the problems that they're facing. | ||
It must be misogyny because a Netflix cartoon told me so. | ||
And samurai swords. | ||
Because Keir Starmer, pedophile defender, decided that's the big issue. | ||
Novelty samurai swords. | ||
Yeah, I think the UK needs to revolt. | ||
I think we need a revolution there. | ||
From banned nunchucks to sausage links, why UK hated Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles? | ||
Yeah, so for a while, the UK actually had a rule where you couldn't have anything in the title that referenced death. | ||
So Ninja was blocked because ninjas are assassins. | ||
So you couldn't have, like, back in the day in the 80s when Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was airing, it was called, like, Teenage Mutant Rumble Turtles or something in the UK because you couldn't have the word ninja. | ||
Couldn't have the word assassin. | ||
You couldn't have words that referenced professional killers in your title. | ||
So, I mean, the UK has been... | ||
I don't want to use the word pussified, but I can't think of a better one. | ||
For a very long time. | ||
We'll talk to Raw Egg Nationalists about this. | ||
And hopefully we won't get him arrested in his home country. | ||
Maybe I need to cover all this stuff before he gets in studio so they can't show this at his trial for wrong think. | ||
As he's put in prison for a decade for expressing discontent at the utter absurdity of his home country. | ||
By the way, in nine days, the UK legal system will openly discriminate against white men and be lenient towards ethnic minorities. | ||
Labor has officially sanctioned the two-tier justice system. | ||
Still can't believe this is happening. | ||
Britain is broken. | ||
And have you ever seen a more accurate portrayal of a wolf in sheep's clothing? | ||
It literally looks like she's wearing sheepskin. | ||
But it is some demented-looking Muslim woman wearing the white hair coat. | ||
Sometimes a simple sort of vestigial appearance. | ||
Doesn't really comport with how this works. | ||
This is how you take a nation over in one generation from mirthful moments. | ||
The mayor of London is Muslim. | ||
The mayor of Birmingham is Muslim. | ||
The mayor of Leeds is Muslim. | ||
The mayor of Blackburn is Muslim. | ||
The mayor of Sheffield. | ||
The mayor of Oxford. | ||
The mayor of Luton. | ||
The mayor of Oldham. | ||
Rochdale. All of this was achieved with only 4 million Muslims out of 66 million people in England. | ||
Today there are over 3,000 mosques in England. | ||
There are over 130 Sharia courts. | ||
There are more than 50 Sharia councils. | ||
78% of Muslim women do not work, receive state support and free accommodation. | ||
63% of Muslims do not work, receive state support and free housing. | ||
State support in Muslim families with an average of 6 to 8 children receive free accommodation. | ||
Now every school in the UK is required to teach lessons about Islam. | ||
Did anybody actually vote for this? | ||
No, you just didn't stop them from doing it. | ||
You just let them call you racist and stop you from doing it. | ||
Again, I almost want to show more. | ||
Oh yeah, look at this. | ||
There you go, right there. | ||
Yeah, that's exactly right. | ||
I should have shown more from Yes Minister, because again, they were dealing with this in the 80s, where they're literally saying, like, we should actually criticize African countries, not just the white ones. | ||
And they're like, oh, so you're a racist. | ||
So it's just like, okay, the word racist has conquered your country. | ||
The word racist has overcome a thousand years of British rule. | ||
A word. | ||
A single word without a real meaning has allowed for the subversion and destruction of an empire that once Spanned the globe. | ||
Had something like three quarters of the world's population under its control. | ||
Keir Starmer. | ||
It's no more ninja swords. | ||
I know what you're thinking. | ||
unidentified
|
A Muslim just tried to set off a pressure cooker bomb in a hospital, but don't worry. | |
We're going after the swords you can get at the mall. | ||
We're going after the blunt blades that nerds wear at Comic-Con. | ||
Problem solved. | ||
I'm sure this will be solved. | ||
I'm sure after this, there will be no more terrorist attacks, no more stabbings, no more beheadings of police in the streets, no more stabbing of little girls at dance class, because finally, finally the plague of ninja violence in the UK will be over. | ||
unidentified
|
Our conversation is with Mr. Yuri Alexandrovich Besmianov. | |
He was the son of a high-ranking Soviet Army officer. | ||
He had an outstanding career with the press agency of the Soviet Union. | ||
It turns out that this is also a front for the KGB. | ||
He escaped to the West in 1970 after becoming totally disgusted with the Soviet system, and he did this at great risk to his life. | ||
He certainly is one of the world's outstanding experts on the subject of Soviet propaganda and disinformation and active measures. | ||
When the Soviets use the phrase ideological subversion, what do they mean? | ||
Ideological subversion or active measures, активные мероприятия, in the language of the KGB, or psychological. | ||
What it basically means is to change the perception of reality of every American to such an extent that no one is able to come to sensible conclusions in the interests of defending themselves, their families, their community, and their country. | ||
It's a great brainwashing process and it's divided in four basic stages. | ||
The first one being demoralization. | ||
A person who was demoralized is unable to assess true information. | ||
The facts tell nothing to him. | ||
unidentified
|
Do you believe then that men can become pregnant and have abortions? | |
Yes. What has this world come to? | ||
It's come to a world where drug kids actually exist. | ||
And people do ketamine on a couch. | ||
The next stage is destabilization. | ||
unidentified
|
Economy. There are some dire predictions on where the world economy is going. | |
Foreign relations. | ||
unidentified
|
Some of the world's superpowers could be on a collision course. | |
Defense systems. | ||
unidentified
|
The US Army is cutting back its expectations due to, quote, unprecedented recruitment challenges. | |
The next stage, of course, is crisis. | ||
unidentified
|
Folks! We're in a crisis. | |
After crisis, you have so-called the period of normalization. | ||
unidentified
|
When we say getting back to normal, we mean something very different from what we're going through right now. | |
The demoralization process is basically completed already. | ||
I could never believe it when I landed in this part of the world that the process will go that fast. | ||
This is exactly what the KGB and Marxist-Leninist propaganda wants from Americans. | ||
To distract their opinion and attention from real issues of the United States. | ||
To have a bunch of duped Americans, then Americans who are healthy, physically fit, and alert to the reality. | ||
unidentified
|
What is your ideal political or social structure? | |
Communist utopia. | ||
That's why my KGB instructors specifically made the point. | ||
Try to get into filthy rich movie makers. | ||
Intellectuals, cynical, egocentric people who can look into your eyes with angelic expression and tell you a lie. | ||
These are the people who KGB wanted very much to recruit. | ||
All these professors and all these beautiful civil rights defenders, they are instrumental in the process of subversion only to destabilize a nation. | ||
When their job is completed, they think that they will come to power. | ||
That will never happen, of course. | ||
The psychological shock when they will see in future what the beautiful society of equality and social justice means in practice, obviously they will join the links of dissenters. | ||
Marxist-Leninist regime does not tolerate these people. | ||
In future, these people will be simply squashed like cockroaches. | ||
Nobody is going to pay them nothing for their beautiful, noble ideas of equality. | ||
The United States is in the state of war. | ||
The initiator of this war is the world communist system. | ||
unidentified
|
The only solution is the communist revolution. | |
That's right. | ||
We need communists. | ||
That's what we need. | ||
This is it. | ||
This is the last country of freedom and possibility. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, so what do we do? | |
What is your recommendation to the American people? | ||
The immediate thing that comes to my mind is, of course, there must be a very strong... | ||
National effort to educate people in the spirit of real patriotism, number one. | ||
Number two, to explain them the real danger of socialist, communist, whatever, welfare state, big brother government. | ||
If people will fail to grasp the impending danger, nothing ever can help United States. | ||
You may kiss goodbye to your freedom, including your precious lives. | ||
I know Americans don't like to listen to things which are unpleasant. | ||
I tried to get the message across to my horror. | ||
Nobody wanted even to listen, least of all to believe what I had to say. | ||
The time bomb is ticking, but every second, the disaster is coming closer and closer. | ||
Unlike myself, you will have nowhere to defect to. | ||
United States, wake up. | ||
Alright, welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, third hour of American Journal is on and I'm so happy to be joined in studio by the one and only Raw Egg Nationalist. | ||
He's the founder and editor of Man's World Magazine and a frequent contributor to InfoWars amongst other publications. | ||
You can find in-depth articles about culture, politics, lifestyle, and fitness by visiting mansworldmag.online, rawegstack.com, and of course by following him on X at babygravy9. | ||
At Baby Gravy 9, Roy Ignatius. | ||
Welcome. Welcome, sir. | ||
It's an absolute pleasure to be here. | ||
Thank you. | ||
It's an honor to have you. | ||
And we were just saying, I was saying earlier in the show, you were docs. | ||
You were anonymous for a long time. | ||
Then you were docs. | ||
They published your face and name. | ||
And what's been the downside to that? | ||
Because the upside is, here you are in studio, in front of the camera, getting to talk to us in person, not anonymously. | ||
Has there been any downside to this? | ||
I don't actually think there has. | ||
It's kind of strange, you know. | ||
I spent a long time, I spent four years thinking, I've got to protect my anonymity, I've got to remain behind this mask, and then the mask was lifted for me. | ||
At a moment, actually, when I had a lot of popularity, you know, I mean, I had an independent income, for example, you know, I didn't have a normie job, so there wasn't really the possibility of me losing my job, but nevertheless, you know, Britain is a... | ||
We've slid into a kind of sinister, very sinister tyranny. | ||
Britain has become a strange, unrecognisable place, actually. | ||
Even for me, you know, I'm 37, you know, and Britain has changed a huge amount in my lifetime. | ||
But... Nevertheless, no, I was doxxed, and as far as I can see so far, it's been all possible. | ||
Well, it'd be different if you were like a 300-pound greasy basement-dwelling dude, right? | ||
I think that's what they were expecting, right? | ||
They're like, oh, he talks about fitness, but we'll show. | ||
And it's like, oh, actually, he's a good-looking, you know, fit 37-year-old. | ||
He actually is exactly who you'd expect him to be. | ||
They must have been disappointed. | ||
But that's happened, like, a bunch of times with a bunch of different people. | ||
They go through all these loops, and... | ||
I think they're tied in with people in Twitter. | ||
I think they have the Twitter backend. | ||
Do you have any idea how they got your information, how they unmasked you? | ||
Well, so actually when I was unmasked, there was all sorts of strange stuff going on. | ||
So two weeks before I was unmasked, I went into my local farm shop. | ||
I don't know if you saw about this. | ||
I went into my local farm shop and the owner of the farm shop comes over to me and says, oh, Charlie, Charlie, you've got to see this. | ||
Takes out an email from his pocket from a business insider journalist, from one called Catherine Long. | ||
And she somehow had found out that I was shopping at this farm shop. | ||
Wow. She sent this guy an email saying, look, there's a chap who shops at your farm shop. | ||
He buys prodigious quantities of raw eggs and raw milk. | ||
That's how they got you. | ||
They looked at all the receipts. | ||
They're like, who's buying wholesale levels of eggs as an individual? | ||
That's how they got you. | ||
So this business insider journalist sent an email. | ||
Now, she's called Catherine Long, and she was involved in the Marco Elez, the Doge stuff. | ||
Okay, yeah, yeah. | ||
So I wrote a piece at the time after I was docked saying, look, there was all this funny stuff going on. | ||
You know, I had a business insider journalist looking into me on the other side of the Atlantic at the same time as this activist organisation in the UK. | ||
Hope Not Hate, they're the ones who doxed me, were looking into me. | ||
Something was going on. | ||
And actually, if you dig into this woman, Catherine Long, you know, she glows, to use the internet slang. | ||
You know, she was at an Ivy League university. | ||
She did some kind of, like, State Department internship working on armed shipments to Iran. | ||
She worked for USAID in Central Asia. | ||
She speaks Farsi and Tajik. | ||
She's, like, a Central Asia expert. | ||
And so at the time I said, look, I think there's government involvement here. | ||
And then I think I was vindicated possibly in that by the Marco Elez stuff that happened recently. | ||
And I revisited Catherine Long and said, look, this is pretty sinister. | ||
But at the same time, it could easily have been a girlfriend as well, a disgruntled ex-girlfriend. | ||
I've got one or two of those. | ||
So I thought, yeah, it could very well just have been that somebody... | ||
Because I was found out by a couple of girlfriends, and they didn't take it very well, let me say that. | ||
Right, right. | ||
Or somebody else you're associated with that you think you can trust, and then they get co-opted, hope not hate, find something about them, and says blackmail them to give up. | ||
I mean, there's lots of ways they can do it, but regardless, I think it's perfectly reasonable to think that this is intelligence agencies doing this. | ||
If one country can't do it, they outsource it to another. | ||
That's how Five Eyes works. | ||
Yes, exactly. | ||
So it's got to be at least in some way, like, gives you justification for what you've been doing, knowing that you've got intelligence agencies across the world hunting you down like a criminal when really all you've done, not to downplay your work, but is tell people to be healthy, give people insight into, you know, the scientific reality of microplastics and, you know, the health of eggs and natural eating and that sort of stuff. | ||
So, you know, what is it about what you do that has intelligence agencies? | ||
Carrying out operations to unmask you. | ||
Well, on the one hand, I think it's the transatlantic links I think they're interested in. | ||
So I'm British, if you couldn't tell already. | ||
I've been working from Britain, but I have a big audience. | ||
My principal audience has been in the U.S. For various different reasons, I'm more interested in American politics and British politics. | ||
That's one of the main reasons. | ||
So I think the British government is interested in what's going on. | ||
Who are these British people? | ||
Or who is someone like me? | ||
Why am I more interested in the US? | ||
Who am I talking to? | ||
Who am I involved with? | ||
What does that mean about the evolving nature of the right-wing politics? | ||
Influences from America and the UK, that kind of thing. | ||
But I also think it's got a lot to do with the fact that actually I'm promoting a positive message, and they don't know how to deal with that in quite the same way. | ||
That's not really... | ||
When you think of the far right in Britain, you think of skinheads. | ||
I mean, I know I've shaved my head, but I'm not a skinhead. | ||
But that is generally how the far right is portrayed, or even the right wing in the UK is portrayed. | ||
And you can peg them and you can kind of box them in in different ways because you can link them to marches and violence and attacks against immigrants and all that kind of stuff. | ||
But actually here you've got someone who's giving out a positive message, who's talking about the importance of physical health. | ||
Of whole body health, of mental health, you know, doing positive things, taking control of your life. | ||
And that's a message that's really resonated. | ||
It's really resonated. | ||
You know, it's brought me nearly 300,000 followers on Twitter. | ||
I've sold a lot of books. | ||
It's in Tucker Carlson documentary. | ||
They don't know how to deal with it. | ||
And so I think actually what they've done basically is they've resorted to outsourcing work to this activist organization, Hope Not Hate, so that they can intimidate me. | ||
Because that's what they do, you know. | ||
Antifa do it in the US. | ||
It's what happens with doxers in the US as well. | ||
So my friend Jonathan Keeperman, who runs, Lomez, who runs Passage Press, which publishes Man's World, my book, and publishes Curtis Yarvin stuff, and they're publishing my new book. | ||
You know, he was doxed by The Guardian, by this chap called Jason Wilson, who works for Portland Antifa, basically, simply as a publisher of right-wing books, you know. | ||
And there was a very implicit... | ||
Barely, barely kind of hidden threat in there. | ||
They published pictures of his marriage. | ||
They published details about his father's recent death. | ||
It's intimidation, and I think that's basically what they were trying to do with me as well. | ||
They were trying to intimidate me. | ||
These radical left-wing people, they know who you are, they know where you live, or they think they know where you live. | ||
They're watching you. | ||
They could turn up at your house. | ||
So I'm not doing anything criminal. | ||
The government can't be interested in me legitimately as a criminal, as somebody who's involved in breaking the law. | ||
But what they can do is they can exert this kind of second-hand pressure via these activist organizations that are funded by the government. | ||
And Hope Not Hate has been funded by the British government, which is the scandalous thing. | ||
Conservative government as well. | ||
So hundreds of thousands of taxpayer pounds have been given to Hope Not Hate in recent years, including by conservative governments. | ||
Because everything that you're saying, I mean, it's the NGOs, it's things like USAID, exactly the same thing goes on in the UK where it's their non-governmental organizations, but they get all of their funding from the government. | ||
They're just not obliged to be under the same type of scrutiny that actual governmental programs are under. | ||
So it's actually very convenient for them. | ||
They can fund this group. | ||
That group can go out and act in ways that they would never be allowed to act and hope not hate is like a... | ||
One of the main tentpoles of this whole operation. | ||
And of course, now in America, we've got this trend of swatting. | ||
And that is a very dangerous threat of having your information out there. | ||
If people know where you live, they can send the cops after you. | ||
They can come and attack you personally. | ||
So yeah, I think doxing and swatting go hand in hand. | ||
And the doxing is... | ||
Always sort of a prerequisite for the swatting because you've got to know where somebody else is to send the cops after them. | ||
So, yeah, clearly intimidation techniques attempting to be wielded against you. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Well, I mean, the swatting thing really, I mean, should be treated as attempted murder, I think. | ||
I mean, people have died. | ||
And I actually wrote a piece about this for The Daily Caller maybe last week or the week before saying, you know, these people know what they're doing. | ||
There's no question. | ||
I mean, it's not. | ||
Obviously, it's intimidation, and it's a message. | ||
We know where you live. | ||
We can do this at any time. | ||
But also, actually, they're banking on the police turning up in the middle of the night. | ||
You're disoriented. | ||
You get out of bed. | ||
Bright lights, whatever. | ||
You reach for your gun. | ||
You're dead. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
And the calls that they make are specifically designed to bring about the biggest and most dangerous response, right? | ||
I'm hiding. | ||
I mean, I've heard of people being swatted where the people who call say, there are men with guns in my house and they're setting a trap for the police and they're going to kill the police as soon as they get there. | ||
So they go there, you know, expecting a firefight. | ||
It's extremely dangerous. | ||
It's obviously, that's what they intend to happen. | ||
And there's not a lot of other reason to, you know, put out your information except to try to send harassment your way. | ||
It's absolutely sickening. | ||
Now, I've spent the last hour or so... | ||
Sort of criticizing your home country. | ||
But all of Europe, and actually I see a lot of your stuff because I get in in the morning and basically everything on Infowars is from overnight, which is when all the European news breaks. | ||
So when I wake up in the morning, it's really just like a litany of terrorist attacks, a litany of insane measures by the UK government. | ||
I mean, what is it going to take to save Europe at this point? | ||
Is it even possible because... | ||
Again, I just have this Dutch-wing coalition on the brink as Ukraine aid splits government. | ||
Poland, politicians' kids should be sent to the front line first. | ||
I mean, they're trying to start war. | ||
NATO is now saying even if peace is declared between Ukraine and Russia, we're still not going to have peace with Russia, and they'll still be our enemy. | ||
They're trying to draft people. | ||
I mean, all of this is just from today. | ||
Every day is like this. | ||
Europe just seems to be spiraling out of control, collapsing economically because of the Green New Deal. | ||
I mean, there's so many problems. | ||
I mean, what is up with Europe these days? | ||
I don't mean to criticize, but like, what are you guys doing over there? | ||
Yeah, well, I mean, if you go to your average town in the UK, so if I go into my local town, you know, and do a bit of shopping at the weekend or whatever. | ||
People are so demoralized, you know. | ||
It's really tangible. | ||
I mean, things have been bad in the UK for a long time. | ||
I mean, a lot of small communities, urban centers, didn't really recover from the financial crisis, you know. | ||
So there's this kind of lingering sense of decay. | ||
And then there's a much longer sense of decay too, I think. | ||
I mean, I don't think we can underestimate the impact of the loss of empire. | ||
So Britain really hasn't found a place for itself in the world since 1945, since the end of empire. | ||
I mean, we had a brief moment where we were close partners in the war on terror, and I think that provided some sense of kind of renewed international purpose for Britain. | ||
Although that was also very divisive, and you had millions of people marching in the streets against the Iraq war in 2003. | ||
But Britain certainly is a demoralized, declining... | ||
I mean, you know, it's easy to get trapped in these kind of echo chambers on Twitter, you know, where you see what basically appears to amount to kind of demoralisation propaganda, you know, videos of people being attacked by migrants and all that kind of stuff. | ||
But the reality isn't much better, actually. | ||
It's genuinely... | ||
You know, I'm 37, I'm nearly 40, and I've seen quite a lot of stuff happen, and it's very tangible now, in a way that perhaps it wasn't. | ||
Mass migration is really biting in a way that it wasn't before, even before 2020. | ||
So, you know, you see now in small towns and villages, in very rural areas, you'll see sub-Saharan Africans. | ||
You'll see women carrying things on their heads, like it's Tanzania or something. | ||
So things are accelerating fast, but it's happening across the whole of Europe. | ||
I mean, we can fixate on the UK, and the UK is a kind of particularly bad example, I think. | ||
And the current government is bad. | ||
The current government is very bad. | ||
But it's happening in France, Poland. | ||
You know, the EU cancelled the election basically in Romania. | ||
Marine Le Pen in France. | ||
I mean, she may actually go to prison simply for the fact that she's... | ||
Possibly going to win the 2027 election. | ||
Right. I mean, so they're rolling out really extraordinary measures, I think, to counter the right. | ||
And it's hard to see actually how Europe can be saved at the ballot box. | ||
Yeah. Yeah. | ||
But it makes sense that the demoralization is such a powerful force in the UK. | ||
And then here you are as somebody saying, actually, you can change things. | ||
Actually, you don't need to be demoralized. | ||
Actually, you can, if nothing else, at least feel good, at least go out and get fit and, you know, suck up some sun and not just be a miserable puddle. | ||
But they want everybody to be these miserable, hopeless, and... | ||
Because it helps, because if you don't think anything can change, you're not going to try to change anything. | ||
I mean, it's very simple, but that is the playbook they're sort of operating on, is they have everybody in this state of just acceptance, of whatever happens, you have no ability to change it, you have no ability to alter it, just accept it. | ||
Whatever new modern horror they introduce to your culture, it's your job to change your morality, to fit them, and incorporate it into your belief system, rather than impose your belief system, or insist that your belief system... | ||
be upheld. | ||
And so really, the demoralization is not just an outcome of their policies. | ||
It's like an engine which gives them the power to achieve what they're trying to achieve. | ||
And anybody trying to counteract that demoralization, Yes, yeah, of course. | ||
And we saw this dramatized very dramatically during the pandemic, of course. | ||
And, I mean, I think the pandemic is the model, really, for the future. | ||
For the future of government and its relationship with citizens, terrorising citizens, unleashing on citizens, basically tactics of psychological warfare. | ||
It really was a psychological warfare campaign. | ||
And that's what's happening now. | ||
You're seeing this crazy agitation propaganda in the wake of the Southport stabbings. | ||
Terrible, terrible series of murders by the son of a Rwandan immigrant. | ||
He went into a dance class and stabbed... | ||
I think it was 12 little girls and their teachers, and three of them died. | ||
And now what do we have? | ||
Well, we have a television drama series about young white boys stabbing little girls. | ||
And it's transparent, it's incredibly transparent, but it's being laid on so thick, and people are, like I say, so demoralised. | ||
The economy is bad. | ||
Inflation is spiraling out of control. | ||
People have less money. | ||
Public services, the NHS. | ||
I mean, the NHS is basically our golden cow in the UK. | ||
We don't have a national religion. | ||
We're not really Christians anymore. | ||
We worship the NHS. | ||
But people can't even see their doctor. | ||
People can't see a dentist. | ||
Living standards really are declining. | ||
And people really are hurting, but they're still struggling, I think, to put it all together and form a coherent picture. | ||
And the parliamentary system doesn't help. | ||
You know, we were talking about this before we went on air. | ||
We have this first-past-the-post system that makes it very difficult for insurgent parties ever to get into power. | ||
Labour and the Conservatives, and that's it. | ||
And we've got reform now, and they're kind of breaking in, but it's already very clear that actually they're being captured by the system too. | ||
And by that specifically, I mean Nigel Farage. | ||
He actually appears to be basically an establishment turncoat at this point. | ||
He wants to be Prime Minister above all. | ||
Yeah, and that has been very bizarre to me. | ||
I haven't been following as much the drama with Farage, so maybe we can get into that. | ||
With France and Germany, we see the way these parliamentary parties, I mean, you have the conservatives in France and Germany both siding with their communist parties to stop the far right in those countries. | ||
So there's also just a problem, I think, intrinsic in the right wing where it's like we would rather side with left-wing extremists than right-wing extremists, even though the right-wing extremists are correct and are right, you know, AFD. | ||
I wouldn't even call them extremists, but, you know, as they see it, you know, AFD. | ||
They'd rather side with the open, literal communist than AFD. | ||
And then, of course, he's a turncoat as well. | ||
The same type of thing where promised deportations, promised to end the mass immigration. | ||
And yet, as soon as the new leader in Germany gets into office, he reverses course and promises millions and millions of more immigrants. | ||
So, yeah, there's got to be a certain point when the European people either just give up completely or decide the parliamentary system just isn't worth it. | ||
But what is going on with Nigel Farage? | ||
Because like I said, I haven't been following it that closely, but I understand there's like some major rifts in his party, accusations flying back and forth. | ||
What's going on with that? | ||
Yeah, well, it's very disappointing. | ||
I mean, I thought before Donald Trump was elected, I thought, you know what will happen? | ||
Trump will get in on a platform of mass deportation. | ||
You know, 20 million people have to be deported. | ||
This will inspire the right throughout Europe and, you know, mass deportation will be acceptable. | ||
People will say, OK, you know, you can win an election by promising this kind of thing. | ||
And before the election, Farage was saying, no, we can't do mass deportation in the UK. | ||
Just wouldn't happen. | ||
Not practical. | ||
Never going to happen. | ||
He did an interview a few days after Donald Trump was elected with Winston Marshall, and he said, you know what, actually, I think we're going to need to deport about 1.5 million people. | ||
So he was sort of coming around to it, and it looked like he was taking note. | ||
And other parties in Europe, the AFD in particular, have said, well, look, Trump has won on this policy, so we're going to say it out loud too. | ||
It's practical. | ||
People want it. | ||
We're going to give it to them. | ||
But Farage has been... | ||
He's kind of back and forth. | ||
He doesn't seem to really know what he wants beyond being Prime Minister. | ||
And I think he's worried about sounding too extremist. | ||
Right. I think he's... | ||
Because, I mean, American and British politics are different. | ||
They definitely are different. | ||
And, I mean, this explains particularly, you know, people have a real distaste for Trump as a kind of vulgar figure, right? | ||
Right. They kind of think, oh, Trump is vulgar, you know, and so... | ||
We can't be friends with him. | ||
And the same with Elon Musk as well. | ||
You know, people kind of don't like it. | ||
And I don't know if Americans actually appreciate that enough. | ||
Anyway, so Farage is kind of wary of being too associated with Trump, I think. | ||
But also there's this internal stuff going on. | ||
There's another Reform MP. | ||
So there are five MPs for Reform at the moment. | ||
A chap called Rupert Lowe. | ||
And he's very robust. | ||
He talks a lot about mass deportation, a lot about mass immigration. | ||
He talks a lot about grooming gangs as well. | ||
He doesn't hold fire. | ||
He doesn't mince his words at all. | ||
He's looking actually like an alternative leader for the party. | ||
And now there are these sort of trumped-up allegations that have been levelled at him, that he's a bully, that he was making sexually inappropriate comments to staffers and all that kind of stuff. | ||
And they're trying to get rid of him, basically, because he's an internal threat to Nigel Farage, because Nigel Farage wants to be the prime minister. | ||
So there's all of this really, really unpleasant infighting going on. | ||
There's all of this uncertainty about the kind of policies that reform want. | ||
At this critical time when actually they should be seizing the momentum, they should be preparing actually to replace the Conservatives at the very least as the second party in Britain. | ||
But what they're really doing, it looks like, is actually just becoming the Conservatives. | ||
They're just kind of skin-suiting the Conservatives. | ||
It's disappointing because Britain really is in a bad way. | ||
Yeah, well, no, not anymore. | ||
Keir Starmer is going to ban samurai swords. | ||
So I think it's smooth sailing from here on out. | ||
He's going to ban the ninja swords. | ||
So problem solved there. | ||
As long as we get the nunchucks off the street, everything will be safe. | ||
But no, it is completely insane. | ||
I don't know how much longer they can keep this up. | ||
And I feel for the people of Europe. | ||
When we get back on the other side, I want to talk about health. | ||
I want to talk about what RFK Jr. is doing. | ||
You know, so much of what you report is just going through scientific papers about microplastics and their prevalence and the danger they pose to people. | ||
So I'm so glad that this conversation is being mainstream. | ||
We've been, of course, promoting this at Infowars forever, and it's finally getting some mainstream traction, and they're doing everything they can to... | ||
We'll be back on the other side with Raw Egg Nationalist. | ||
You can follow him on X at BabyGravy9. | ||
I'm so glad you've never changed that. | ||
BabyGravy9, mansworldmag.online, raweggstack.com. | ||
And, of course, you can support us by going to the AlexJonesStore.com. | ||
We will be right back. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. | ||
It's the American Journal. | ||
unidentified
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Stay with us. | |
All right, folks, we're back. | ||
We're back, and unfortunately, I got news to bring you, but fortunately, I got the right person to talk about it with. | ||
Raw Egg Nationalist is my guest in studio. | ||
Follow him on X at babygravy9, mansworldmag.online, raweggstack.com is where you can follow him. | ||
And like I was saying, you know, you post a lot of stuff on Infowars from Europe. | ||
When I come in in the morning, it's all the overnight news. | ||
Which is usually just a litany of terrorist attacks. | ||
And here we have another one just breaking minutes ago. | ||
Mass stabbing leaves five people wounded in Amsterdam. | ||
A victim of a stabbing with multiple injuries near Dam Square, which is the main square right there in the center of Amsterdam. | ||
Helped by ambulance workers, live footage of the historic square shows mass crowd gathering on a cordoned off area with a trauma helicopter, ambulances and police fans in attendance. | ||
Was it an incel, a right-wing maniac? | ||
No. Safe to say we know who it will be, and our governments will continue to ignore the problem. | ||
That's the article from Daily Mail. | ||
So I guess no information as of yet as to who committed the stabbing, but I think we can surmise who this might have been. | ||
I mean, it's practically a daily situation in Europe now. | ||
I don't know if there's been a day in the last week that there was an attack. | ||
In Germany earlier today, we had the video. | ||
I mean, it's so much. | ||
It's to the point. | ||
I'm almost sorry for saying it. | ||
It's like, I don't even see it as newsworthy anymore. | ||
I mean, this is from this morning, Visigrad 24. Several people wounded in Berlin after a man drove a car up on a sidewalk and struck a large group of people. | ||
And you can see the emergency response there. | ||
I mean, it is daily at this point. | ||
Yeah, yeah, it is. | ||
And I think also actually what you need to remember is, you know, the grooming gang scandal. | ||
Right. That's been going on for decades. | ||
So it's not that it's just daily. | ||
It's been going on for decades. | ||
These kind of outrages have been taking place silently or not so silently in the background for a long time. | ||
And it does make you wonder, I mean, we're talking before the break, what will it take? | ||
What will it take? | ||
How many Christmas markets need to be, how many crowds need to be run through by a car or by a lorry? | ||
How many people need to be stabbed before people actually say, Before people even actually say, look, mass immigration isn't working. | ||
I mean, that's the very first stage. | ||
That's not saying mass deportations need to happen. | ||
That's just saying, actually, there's something very wrong. | ||
And people, I mean, people have kind of reached that stage, but I think they're also actually kind of scared to say it. | ||
So, yeah, it's a dreadful situation. | ||
It's a dreadful situation, but the way that these stories are reported, of course, you know. | ||
They won't say, I mean, if this chap, assume it was a chap, was saying Allah Akbar, I mean, that's, you know, report that right at the beginning. | ||
Don't wait. | ||
But they do wait, of course. | ||
They just say, you know, somebody stabbed five people. | ||
Yeah. So, I mean, the media is complicit in it. | ||
Absolutely. The media is a big part of it. | ||
And I think one of the strengths, at least of the U.S., of the U.S. system, is that you have alternative media like Infowars. | ||
We don't really have that in the UK. | ||
And it's a big part of the reason, actually, I think, why people aren't quite as awake as they could be. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
And, you know, as you pointed out, there's this Netflix show, Atonement? | ||
Adolescence. Adolescence, yeah, adolescence. | ||
And so it was a real-life event where it was, I don't know, was he the son of Rwandan refugees? | ||
So that was a separate thing. | ||
So that was the Southport stabbings. | ||
Basically a sub-Saharan African. | ||
Stabbed a teenage girl. | ||
I think she was on her way to school. | ||
And that became the basis of this show, Adolescence, which is about a young white boy who basically goes on incel forums and takes the red pill, listens to Andrew Tate, and then decides to stab a girl. | ||
Right. And so they race-swap the main character and make it about a completely different topic. | ||
And then the bizarre... | ||
Bizarrest thing about it is that there's been more action because of this fake movie of a non-existent crime than the actual crimes that have gone on. | ||
So you've got – they're reading it. | ||
They're watching the movie in parliament. | ||
They're making speeches about it. | ||
They're saying this is a big problem. | ||
We need to deal with it. | ||
It's fake. | ||
It doesn't exist, whereas the real stories, the real events go completely unaddressed. | ||
And so when you say the media has a role to play in this, it's like they somehow get to dictate what people's concerns are. | ||
And even though the real threats are going unaddressed, it's the fake threats that get all the attention. | ||
And you can't achieve that without massive media control. | ||
No, absolutely not. | ||
I mean, I think, again, to go back to the pandemic, that's the model. | ||
That's what we're seeing. | ||
We're seeing now the government and the media working together in lockstep, actually, to promote an agenda that's actually counter to the interests of the British people, that is actually... | ||
You know, part and parcel of replacing them. | ||
Actually, that's the only way. | ||
You know, we've seen the emergence of Conor McGregor in Ireland, which is an interesting thing. | ||
That's an interesting development. | ||
He came over and met President Trump. | ||
You know, he's been an outspoken critic of the Irish government. | ||
And now he's said, I'm going to run for prime minister. | ||
I'm going to run to lead the Irish people out of this terrible, terrible place that they've been taken to by their politicians. | ||
Ireland might be the strangest one because... | ||
As nonsensical as it is, there is still the argument where it's like, well, we colonized their countries. | ||
Now they're coming to ours. | ||
We can't really complain. | ||
I think that's fallacious or nonsensical. | ||
Anyway, I don't accept that argument in the first place. | ||
But it still exists for places like England who colonized so many places. | ||
Ireland was a colony. | ||
It has none of that historical guilt. | ||
So they can't play that up in the minds of the people to get them to accept their punishment, essentially. | ||
But also, they got 100 years of resistance against the English only to give up their whole country in the course of a couple years through mass immigration. | ||
It is insane what's happening in Ireland. | ||
Well, but also, I mean, it's not 100 years. | ||
I mean, OK, Ireland has been an independent nation for 100 years, but actually the Irish have been resisting the Anglo-Normans. | ||
Right. For a thousand years. | ||
I mean, Ireland's been basically at war with the English, or certainly the English rulers, for a thousand years. | ||
I mean, they fought the bloodiest struggle at incredible cost and gained their independence, and then they've thrown it away. | ||
And now they're planting migrant centers in the middle of these small towns where you've got the police bodily moving little old ladies out of the way to force South... | ||
Sub-Saharan Africans into their communities. | ||
Well, what's amazing about that as well is that when these... | ||
I mean, they're calling them plantations. | ||
And plantation is the word that was used to describe Protestant settlements in Ireland after Elizabeth I. So they would have plantations in Northern Ireland. | ||
Londonderry was a plantation. | ||
So they're using this word that has a long history, a long, very, very... | ||
Evocative history in Ireland to describe these places. | ||
But when workers find out, oh, actually, this is what we're doing, we're building a migrant centre, they'll walk off. | ||
Irish people will stop working on these things. | ||
So what do they do? | ||
They bring in foreign workers. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
I mean, there's this timeless passage in Aristotle's politics where he talks about the art of the tyrant, what tyrants do. | ||
The kind of ways that they maintain their rule. | ||
One of the things that Aristotle says is the tyrant prefers foreigners over native people, you know. | ||
Right. But what he meant actually, or what he was describing, was the Greek practice of tyrants maintaining retinues drawn from foreigners. | ||
So, you know, you're a Greek tyrant. | ||
Well, all the men around you, all the men who protect you, your bodyguards, you know, your advisors, they're foreign because they're the closest to you and if they were native, they would... | ||
They would kill you eventually. | ||
Right. Well, they'd be a threat to your rule in the same way that the Romans' emperors would surround themselves with eunuchs because they couldn't, you know, found a rival dynasty. | ||
Yeah. But what Aristotle actually couldn't conceive is what's happening now, which is that actually tyrants are replacing their populations with foreigners. | ||
It's not just that they're keeping foreign retinues. | ||
They're actually wholesale replacing their own people with foreigners. | ||
We've entered a kind of tyranny that actually is far more extreme than anything even the great theorists of tyranny could have conceived of in the ancient world. | ||
It's really something to behold. | ||
It's anathema to human nature, I think. | ||
That's why I think it's so hard for those of us still thinking clearly to wrap our minds around why this is happening or how it's happening. | ||
It almost seems like a tactic. | ||
Some of the things that are being done are so outrageous. | ||
Is this being done on purpose just so people, when they hear it, don't believe it because it's so outrageous? | ||
I mean, even stuff, you know, you've got the Independent in Ireland writing an article that says, you know, to save the pension system, Ireland needs 5 million migrants. | ||
It's like, okay, the population of Ireland is 5 million. | ||
So they're openly saying to save the pension system, we have to replace everybody in Ireland. | ||
And they're openly saying it. | ||
And it's like, I don't know, you know. | ||
I can lead you to water. | ||
I can't make you drink. | ||
I mean, they're saying it. | ||
You have to be the one to actually think, like, well, what does this mean? | ||
What are they saying? | ||
They're promoting genocide, in my opinion. | ||
So, you know, how do you get people to care about that when they don't, apparently? | ||
Well, Olaf Scholz a few years ago said to sustain Germany's pension system, then they would need 1.5 million migrants a year. | ||
At the height of the Ukraine war, I think in 2022, I think the Ukrainian labor minister said, we're going to need, I think it was 5 or 10 million migrants post-war. | ||
I mean, it's so on the nose. | ||
It's so incredibly on the nose. | ||
You think, are they really saying this? | ||
You know, the flower of Ukrainian manhood is being slaughtered in ditches and trenches. | ||
And you're talking about, you know, importing basically people from the third world. | ||
Yeah. And it was said openly. | ||
It wasn't like a secret communique. | ||
I mean, it was a statement that was put out by the Ukrainian labor minister. | ||
No, it's crazy that they're even making that statement. | ||
And then, of course, in Germany and France and every other European country that's tried this, you have exactly the same situation where we need all these migrants to boost up the pensions. | ||
The migrants come in. | ||
They all go on welfare. | ||
The problem only gets worse. | ||
Suddenly, they're raising the retirement age by five years in France and Germany. | ||
Because you have to keep working because the pension system is still insolvent even more so because we bought in a bunch of people that are just draining resources instead of adding. | ||
And instead of going, okay, that didn't work, let's stop this, they go, well, we just need even more now. | ||
The more the problem gets worse, the more they, you know, suggest this solution that only makes things worse. | ||
It's like this feedback loop that's so obvious, I don't know how we have to be the ones making this argument, but here we are. | ||
Yeah, quite. | ||
Well, I mean, look, Twitter is a great place actually to be for, Stats and analysis, that's one of the things that I like about Twitter is you'll get people posting stats and analysing them and you'll often see immigration stats posted about the economic contributions of migrants. | ||
Now a lot of European nations actually have stopped collecting that kind of data because they know how explosive it is. | ||
They know that if you can show that actually the average migrant is a net drain, hundreds of thousands of euros or even a million euros over a lifetime. | ||
Then people are going to start to think, well, actually, you know, what are we doing here? | ||
The argument kind of falls apart, yeah. | ||
But there are a few countries that still do that. | ||
Denmark is one of them, notably. | ||
And there have been a lot of interesting stats that have come out of Denmark that have shown, you know, the only migrants who make any kind of contribution to the Danish state are European migrants and Western European migrants at that. | ||
So even Eastern European migrants don't really make a positive contribution. | ||
I think if people knew the full extent, actually, to which these people are a drain on the system, then, again, that would be very radicalising. | ||
But the official ideology, of course, is we need people to prop up the pension system, we need people to do the jobs, etc. | ||
We need doctors and lawyers. | ||
When, in fact, actually the kind of people who are coming are people who will spend a lifetime on benefits, who will contribute nothing and also commit loads of crime. | ||
I mean, it's... | ||
But it's been going on for, you know, I mean, mass immigration began in the UK in 1997 officially with Tony Blair. | ||
Net migration, I think, was 50,000 in 1997. | ||
And now it's over a million a year legally. | ||
It's been going on for a long time. | ||
But people still cling to these outdated arguments about the economic benefits of migration. | ||
And so one of the important things actually is trying to educate people. | ||
This is the reality. | ||
Mass migration. | ||
You're told this by the politicians. | ||
You're told this by the apologists of free trade and open borders. | ||
People like Fraser Nelson in the UK, for example. | ||
But actually, the reality is very different. | ||
And you can see the reality when you go to your local town. | ||
You can see the reality when you go to London now. | ||
I mean, London has changed enormously. | ||
I mean, I hadn't been to London since before the pandemic until 2023. | ||
I went back and it was a different city. | ||
Unbelievable. No, it absolutely is. | ||
And again, it would be one thing if this, you know, if this was one country in Europe that was doing this and we could all look at it and go, hey, if that's what you want to do, it's your prerogative. | ||
But the fact that every single capital in Europe is experiencing exactly the same thing, clearly this is a coordinated continent-wide attack against the people of Europe. | ||
And, you know, I think it has to do with the fact that we were talking about it actually before we went live, but, you know, Europe has this sort of I don't know. | ||
But, you know, America has this revolutionary spirit because of our founding, because of the history that we teach. | ||
But I always argue that that was an outgrowth of what England had been engaged in for, you know, 500 years at that point, from the Magna Carta to the English Revolution, Oliver Cromwell. | ||
I mean, say what you want about it. | ||
And there's there's the religious aspect to it. | ||
But the end of the day, it was about sort of asserting liberty against tyrannical people. | ||
Monarchs that is deeply rooted in European history and it just seems like Europeans in history have been the ones willing to stand up against tyranny. | ||
Well, that's very inconvenient for a tyrant. | ||
Get rid of those people with that historical and even genetic heritage of liberty and bring in people who, you know, if they're from some village in Africa and live in a mud hut and you can give them a tiny little apartment, it would be unacceptable to a normal British person that that level of living but it's a huge upgrade from the third world. | ||
They'll let you get away with anything. | ||
They'll go along with whatever tyranny you want to impose because their life is so much better than it was, you know, in the in the third world country where they came from. | ||
So it seems like they're trying to get rid of Europeans because Europeans have the streak that that brought about human rights and, you know, created all of these great things that are a barrier to their total control. | ||
I think you're right about the history as well. | ||
I think rediscovering. | ||
Say, for the British people, rediscovering British history is an essential part, actually, of rediscovering our freedom. | ||
So, yes, I mean, the Americans and the British, you know, that was a fork in the road. | ||
The revolution was a fork in the road. | ||
And the Americans went one way with the British tradition of liberty, and we've gone the other, actually, obviously, over the last 250 years. | ||
But before that point, beyond that point, in the Civil War... | ||
In the Glorious Revolution, right back to Magna Carta, even perhaps arguably back to Anglo-Saxon times. | ||
You know, we share the same fundamental concepts of liberty, we share the same fundamental history, the same relationship to power, the same idea about the necessary limits on power, all that kind of stuff. | ||
And it remains for us actually to rediscover it. | ||
And that's part of the reason, I think, obviously, why British people aren't taught their own history and why actually European people aren't taught their own history either. | ||
I mean, I had a German girlfriend a few years ago and she said to me, the German system... | ||
Which is the craziest thing to say! | ||
I know. | ||
Yeah, so Germany, there's just this one central event that should make you feel ashamed of being German and justifies all of the social policies, all of these progressive social policies. | ||
Well, it's not quite that bad in the UK, but it's still nevertheless the same. | ||
Even when I was at school in the early 2000s, at secondary school, post-11 to 18, it was slavery. | ||
It was the British Empire. | ||
It was the evils of the British Empire. | ||
We had some of the Holocaust. | ||
There wasn't anything to be proud of. | ||
It wasn't like, you know, actually you have an identity as a British person and that identity involves, among other things, you know, this fundamental, this kind of ideological creation of liberty as we understand it today. | ||
None of that. | ||
And I think that's very deliberate. | ||
I think it is a deliberate way of you sever people from their history, you sever them from their identity, and you can... | ||
Do things to them that you couldn't otherwise do if they were aware of who they are and where they've come from. | ||
Yeah, I mean, there's also the total inversion, especially when it comes to the UK, because the UK ended slavery, but now you're the one responsible for it. | ||
The UK ended the Holocaust. | ||
Now you have to, you know, watch out or else you're going to commit the next Holocaust. | ||
And so you have to have, you know, speech control to stop that eventuality. | ||
So it's even more outrageous for the UK. | ||
At least in Germany, you could say, well, there was the Holocaust and we got to teach it. | ||
But for the UK... | ||
You guys ended the Holocaust, but now it's being used to, you know, browbeat white people and convince them not to have an identity or, you know, collective policies that would benefit white people. | ||
That's evil, even though the UK is the one that ended the Holocaust. | ||
So there's an inversion that takes place as well. | ||
Yeah, absolutely, yes. | ||
It's not simply a neglect of history. | ||
Yeah, I think it is an inversion. | ||
It's a very deliberate narrative. | ||
Maybe, like you say, maybe it fits Germany. | ||
Maybe the Germans should reflect on that event. | ||
But why the British? | ||
Why the Americans? | ||
What did we contribute to that? | ||
How did we manifest that, as it were? | ||
So yeah, it's an insidious thing, but it's working. | ||
It works ever so well. | ||
And that's why they continue to do it. | ||
And that's why, for instance... | ||
They replace white actors in period dramas. | ||
Everywhere you see history in Europe, you see this process taking place. | ||
That's why Anne Boleyn in Channel 5 drama is black. | ||
They're saying you don't have a history. | ||
You have no ownership of your own history. | ||
It's an insidious process. | ||
It's a dangerous process. | ||
When people object to it, they're just branded racist, of course. | ||
Absolutely. Well, because it's convenient and that word has conquered a continent. | ||
But this is so interesting that you bring this up. | ||
Jack Posobiec tweeted this today out. | ||
From Grok, Chinese audiences are boycotting the Snow White movie due to Rachel Zegler's casting, which deviates from the traditional skin as white as snow image, causing a cultural disconnect. | ||
Her appearance, not her acting, fuels the backlash seen as pushing Western woke values rejected as baiju, which means like, you know, stupid leftist Westerner. | ||
Plot changes in CGI dwarfs also contributed to the poor reception in China. | ||
But I think that's such a great, you know, illustration because it's true, you know, if any other race is race-swapped, white people get really mad. | ||
But then you race swap a white person and they go, well, but that's okay. | ||
It's like almost a weird inverted white supremacy where it's like, well, we're white. | ||
We can take it. | ||
It's fine when it happens to us because we're white after all. | ||
So it's fine. | ||
And it's weird because then you've got the Chinese going, no, it's not supposed to be white. | ||
This is wrong. | ||
This is messed up, which is what white people's reaction is when it's other races being race swapped. | ||
So it's just this self-hatred whites have been pumped with that is really inexplicable to me and hypocritical to the nth degree. | ||
Well, what's interesting, actually, I did see a video on Twitter the other day, a TikTok video, where there was a young Zoomer-type chap and he was dancing. | ||
And the caption was something like, you know, things are so bad. | ||
You know, when you can't get a home and things are so bad that actually all of the decades of anti-white agitpropaganda just, you know, kind of like disappear, evaporate. | ||
Right. I mean, I do think that actually... | ||
People are starting to see through it. | ||
People are definitely starting to see through it. | ||
And it's working out in ways that are unusual. | ||
I mean, we all probably predicted that the Zoomers would be the most woke generation. | ||
They've been spoon-fed this stuff from birth. | ||
I mean, we were spoon-fed it a bit later, when perhaps our minds had formed a little bit better and we were maybe... | ||
Better equipped to resist it, but actually, you know, these people, these kids who've been spoon-fed it from the cradle, they're actually rejecting it the most violently, in large part because actually they're just looking around at the economic situation, at the social situation. | ||
I mean, it was very interesting what happened to that Harry Sisson chap. | ||
Right. I mean, that's so funny. | ||
Yeah, I haven't even really talked about that that much, but it was imminently predictable that the, you know, left-wing spokesperson would be... | ||
You know, brought down by accusations of sexual impropriety when it really was just like text messages or something. | ||
I mean, the whole thing is... | ||
But that's all that the left has to offer young people. | ||
It's like, if you're a young white man, then you're a whipping boy. | ||
And it's not a wonder that people are waking up to that and resisting it. | ||
Well, actually, you know what? | ||
Maybe the alternative isn't so bad. | ||
Well, and I just, you know, I just always try to point out, like I say to white people, like, look, white people, you're not special, all right? | ||
You deserve the same protection as everybody else. | ||
You're not immune to damage. | ||
You can go away. | ||
You could die. | ||
You could, you know, be destroyed. | ||
You're not immortal. | ||
You're not, you know, more special than other races. | ||
And if every other race deserves these protections, you do too. | ||
Stop thinking you're special. | ||
Again, sort of a weird, like, anti-white supremacy message of just like... | ||
Guys, you're not special. | ||
Stop acting like you're immune to this stuff. | ||
We haven't even gotten into health and stuff, and that's where I find your work most valuable is going through scientific studies and things. | ||
You've got to go to babygravy9 on X, x.com slash babygravy9 at babygravy9, mansworldmag.online, raweggstack.com. | ||
I, of course, wrote an article for you about the Alamo that ties in directly into all of this. | ||
Because, again, they try to take, you know, the lesson of the Alamo, the lesson of English history, all of this is people can stand up, resist tyranny, come together for a good cause against all odds, and still come out successful. | ||
And that's the message they don't want people to learn and why people like you have to be shut down. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us. | ||
So good to see you in person. | ||
You're at NatalCon this weekend. | ||
Tickets are sold out, so you can't get them if you want them, but he'll be there. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us, sir. | ||
It was an absolute pleasure. | ||
The pleasure is all mine. | ||
Babygravy9onX, mansworldmag.online, raweggstack.com. | ||
That's about going to do it for us. | ||
Stay tuned. | ||
The Alex Jones Show begins in 90 seconds, folks. | ||
Don't go anywhere. | ||
You can support us at thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
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We'll see you next time. | |
While other networks lie to you about what's happening now, Infowars tells you the truth about what's happening next. | ||
Here's where all eyes now are on gold and silver. | ||
Because gold went over $3,000 an ounce, it's at an all-time high. | ||
That's a very strong technical and psychological threshold number, that 3,000. | ||
So now that the world is looking at gold, the world is also going to be looking at silver. | ||
So even the massive growth that we've already seen... | ||
I'm guessing it's just the beginning. | ||
Gut level, where do you think gold is in a month? | ||
3,100 in a month, like in the next three to four weeks. | ||
And then I think it gets to 3,200 by the beginning of the summer. | ||
And we could literally see 4,000 as momentum starts to gather and as the eyes of the world get on it. | ||
And then silver, you know, probably 50 to 75. People need to call you, do a free consultation, leave your name and number, 720-605-30000, kepm.com forward slash gold. | ||
Do the form. | ||
They'll call you back. | ||
They'll do a free consultation. | ||
They can roll over your IRAs, 401ks. | ||
Do it now, folks. | ||
Dr. Kirk Elliott, thank you so much. | ||
My pleasure. | ||
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See ya. | |
It's good to be right, isn't it? |