Speaker | Time | Text |
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I haven't been getting up here for the last few years saying the Democratic Party is gonna die. | ||
Because I knew all the numbers. | ||
I knew they were stealing almost every election around the country, where they were still in power. | ||
Evidence in every sector. | ||
And now you've heard them say, oh, no course correction, over the edge of a cliff, the party's dying, we're becoming extinct. | ||
Tone deaf. | ||
And now Bill Maher. | ||
I didn't think of this word, because I've just been using all the terms they admit about themselves. | ||
Game over. | ||
Yes! Yes, game over! | ||
unidentified
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Now what the f*** are we supposed to do? | |
We're some real freaks now, man! | ||
unidentified
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You finished? | |
I'm sorry, Newt. | ||
You don't have to be sorry. | ||
It wasn't your fault. | ||
That's it, man. | ||
Game over, man! | ||
Game over! | ||
Okay, so just to continue on this for a minute, because I just saw this really bad news for Democrats. | ||
2030 reapportionment. | ||
There's a group called the American Redistricting Project, and in five years, we will be redistricting. | ||
California is projected to lose three seats, New York two. | ||
Also gonna lose a seat, Minnesota, Oregon, Rhode Island, Illinois. | ||
All blue states. | ||
Who's getting these? | ||
Texas, Florida, Idaho, and Utah. | ||
I mean, this looks like game over. | ||
Now the Democrats are officially starting to split in two. | ||
And normally, if you look through history, with parliamentary systems for the last 350 years and ours the last 250, normally you'd have to at least have two parties. | ||
So, I mean, we have to have that because you've got to balance things out and have a debate. | ||
But it would normally take a decade for people to figure out a party's died, and then it would take time for that to shake out. | ||
Everything's accelerated now. | ||
So, this is just ultra-massive. | ||
But here's the problem. | ||
In the Democrat Party war plans, they plan to foment violence, call it a racial civil war, and burn the country down to drive Trump from office. | ||
unidentified
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Do you think that America is a country worth saving? | |
No! No! | ||
unidentified
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Burn it all the f**k down! | |
Do what? | ||
unidentified
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Burn it the f**k down! | |
They're not going to let you take office. | ||
The only way we're getting Donald Trump or J.D. Vance or his ilk out of power is having tens of millions of people in the streets. | ||
And probably, we're going to probably have to have a few thousand people die at the hands of cops and soldiers before people get outraged enough to actually force the government to resign. | ||
And now, 90% of the people at these Bernie Sanders AOC rallies on record With the GPS data, because you can just scan the data, you can buy from the phone company all the information. | ||
unidentified
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Tony Saruga saying, GPS, here we go again. | |
There were 20,189 devices, still a large crowd, but not even close to the 30,000 quoted in Denver newspapers, nor the 34,000 quoted by Bernie Sanders and AOC. | ||
84% of the devices present had attended nine or more Kamala Harris rallies. | ||
Antifa BLM riots or pro amass demonstrations. | ||
So the Democrats rent a mob, keeps appearing at all these events in order to pretend like they have some sort of popularity. | ||
That's how Dinesh D'Souza, you know, went and picked one Democrat town, like 2,000 mules, Pennsylvania. | ||
He picked a few others, but, you know, just tracked, bought the cell phone data, then showed them going to these safe houses, getting the Ballots, then going to the drop boxes, taking the photo, wearing their masks to cover up, putting them in the drop boxes, going back getting more, going to another ballot box, drop box. | ||
Oh! The hire a crowd business operates openly and makes journalism even more difficult. | ||
Oh yeah, know what's real and what's not. | ||
Obama's dirty little secret, USA ain't caught in riot money scheme. | ||
Remember that? | ||
It's all paid for. | ||
They're a bunch of terrorists, want to try to bully us. | ||
Well, guess what, witch? | ||
It ain't working! | ||
You just woke up the sleeping giant! | ||
That's their answer is Soros is making a move on the Democratic Party with his son. | ||
He's basically a vegetable now, but that whole group, the Soros gang, the Soros cult, and they've overthrown governments all over the world before. | ||
They brag about it. | ||
This is what they do. | ||
And they're still now trying to take over the Democratic Party when it's their open communist violent activity that's turned everybody against them. | ||
You say, well, and then a lot of the Democratic Party is like, stop that. | ||
Stop it. | ||
You're killing the party. | ||
You're killing the party. | ||
Let's at least pretend to be conservative or populist or pro-human. | ||
And they say no. | ||
Now, they know that's just going to kill the party faster. | ||
So why are they doing it? | ||
Because they intend to have a violent uprising build as a racial civil war. | ||
All they can do now is try to turn over the chessboard. | ||
That's all they got left. | ||
unidentified
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It's Monday, March 31st, 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 thing. | ||
Get everybody and this 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
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We're going to be live this Monday morning, the 31st of March, 20, 25. | |
We've got a big show for you today. | ||
We've got a pre-recorded interview with Carl Benjamin, a.k.a. | ||
Sargon Abacad. | ||
We'll play that for you in the third hour. | ||
Very wide-ranging discussion. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
Although we didn't talk too much about the UK in particular. | ||
We talked a lot about Europe overall and sort of the philosophical underpinnings of the Globalist scheme and the populist uprising That's facing it down, | ||
but we didn't really talk too much in particular about the state of the UK So I'll have to do that today Because it's in quite a state But we are probably at this moment closer to World War three An all-out nuclear war than ever in my lifetime As it seems though as though peace talks with Ukraine or peace talks with Russia over Ukraine are going a bit sideways There | ||
are lots of Data points as well as just you know rumors flying behind the scenes that Israel is gearing up to attack Iranian nuclear sites Sometime this week And of course China is making their I | ||
don't Very troubling developments around the entire world, so we'll show you all those videos as well. | ||
But let's get into it as we do every day with our Daily Dispatch. | ||
unidentified
|
Daily Dispatch. | |
Alright, here it is, folks, your Daily Dispatch for Monday, the 31st of March, 2025. | ||
Trump, quote, very angry and pissed off at Putin, threatens new tariffs. | ||
Why should Russia's refusal to make big concessions come as any surprise either to the White House or mainstream media given Russian forces are clearly steadily gaining on the battlefield? | ||
In a phone interview with NBC on Sunday, President Donald Trump said, I'm going to put secondary tariffs on oil, on all oil coming out of Russia. | ||
Trump went on to say he's very angry and pissed off, particularly at President Vladimir Putin's attacking the legitimacy of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's and his leadership. | ||
I was very angry, very pissed off when Putin, quote, started getting into Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelensky's credibility and started talking about new leadership in Ukraine. | ||
Trump told NBC's Kirsten Welker in a phone call. | ||
Trump said that Putin's comments on Zelensky are not going in the right direction. | ||
This was in reference to a Friday plan pitched by Putin for a transitional administration for Ukraine under the auspices of the UN. | ||
The immediate aim would be ceasefire, leaning towards democratic election, followed by the negotiation of a peace agreement with the new authorities. | ||
We reported that to you on Friday. | ||
I don't really get what the big problem is here. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Everything about these negotiations is very bizarre. | ||
It's very strange. | ||
It just seems like every couple of days all the sides switch. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I really don't get it. | ||
I really thought we would have had some sort of settlement at this point. | ||
Doesn't seem like it's all that difficult. | ||
Ukraine is losing. | ||
They have lost. | ||
They rely entirely on what we send them. | ||
Solution's pretty obvious. | ||
Cut them off. | ||
Yeah, problem solved. | ||
I mean, cut them off. | ||
Negotiate with Russia. | ||
And it's over. | ||
I don't understand how every couple of days, like, Zelensky agrees to this, now Zelensky's backed off. | ||
Donald Trump says he's best friends with Zelensky. | ||
Now he says Zelensky's illegitimate. | ||
Now he's mad that Putin says Zelensky's illegitimate. | ||
It's like, what are we talking about? | ||
I genuinely don't get it. | ||
He's like, I'm very, I was very angry and pissed off when Putin started getting into Zelensky's credibility. | ||
But Trump, you have discredited Zelensky. | ||
You are the one who called him a dictator and said that he's refusing to have elections and said one of the primary I don't get it. | ||
I don't get it. | ||
Maybe there's something going on behind the scenes that we don't know about. | ||
Well, I'll keep reading here. | ||
He laid out what we could discuss the possibility of introduction of temporary governance in Ukraine while Ukraine holds democratic elections to bring to power a capable government that enjoys the trust of the people. | ||
Again, that's what Putin suggested. | ||
After this, he explained the two warring sides could start talks with them about a peace treaty. | ||
Putin has in the recent past complained that Zelensky is illegitimate and thus can't legally be negotiated with since he's canceled democratic elections on an indefinite basis. | ||
So, Trump has clearly brushed this aside in the new Sunday comments, but again, Trump has made exactly the same statement, so I don't even understand what he's angry about. | ||
Trump attacking Putin for denouncing Zelensky as illegitimate will surely not be taken as very serious critique by the Kremlin, given the irony of Trump himself not too long ago having blasted Zelensky as a, quote, dictator without elections. | ||
Trump confirmed to NBC that he'll speak again with his Russian counterpart this week. | ||
Russia has indicated that the question of the Black Sea ceasefire is still being negotiated and is awaiting removal of sanctions on agricultural exports, which necessitates specific banks being reconnected with the SWIFT payment system. | ||
But Europe has said that no, it won't go along with any plan that results in easing sanctions. | ||
Again, we can touch on this again. | ||
We'll show you what Putin is saying, but essentially Putin is like, we're winning in Ukraine. | ||
We don't have to have peace because on the current I don't get it. | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's very weird. | ||
Trump going, Zelensky's illegitimate. | ||
He doesn't hold elections. | ||
And Putin's like, yeah, Zelensky's illegitimate, he doesn't hold elections. | ||
Trump's like, how dare you? | ||
Now I'm pissed off. | ||
It's like, pissed off because he's copying you? | ||
I don't... | ||
whatever. I don't understand, but... | ||
Time is ticking. | ||
The clock is ticking. | ||
We're still... | ||
waiting for the bloodshed to end, I guess. | ||
Meanwhile, Utah becomes first U.S. state to ban fluoride in its water. | ||
Utah has become the first U.S. state to ban the use of fluoride in its public water following concerns raised by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy that the mineral poses potential health risks. | ||
Governor Spencer Cox signed the ban into law this week, which will go into effect on the 7th of May. | ||
Other states, including Florida and Ohio, are weighing similar legislation. | ||
Fluoride has been added to U.S. drinking water since 1945 to prevent cavities, amongst other things. | ||
To prevent cavities and free thought. | ||
To prevent cavities and Utah's move to remove the mineral has been criticized by experts who worry it will have consequences for oral health, especially for children. | ||
The bill signed by Cox on Thursday prohibits communities from adding fluoride to their public water supplies. | ||
The law does not mention any public health concerns related to the mineral, but Republican state lawmaker Stephanie Gracias, who introduced the bill in the state legislature, has argued that there is research suggesting fluoride could have possible cognitive effects in children. | ||
Funny how they report that right state lawmaker Argued that research suggesting fluoride could have possible. | ||
Let me rephrase that for you BBC yes Studies have shown long-term You know massive studies out of China has shown conclusively that fluoride does in fact lower your IQ Yeah, I don't need a state representative to express that in order to quote it. | ||
It is just the fact But if you're trying to discredit that fact, then you present it as some sort of opinion. | ||
But good for Utah. | ||
And again, we're seeing more and more that the state level is really the best place to defeat some of the globalist programs, whether it's chemtrails or fluoride in the water or, you know, homosexual programming in elementary schools. | ||
And the federal government, not exactly the best platform to be arguing these things from. | ||
The states, however, I don't know. | ||
You can do that. | ||
It's in the rat poison section of your hardware store, or you can buy water bottles with fluoride added. | ||
They advertise that. | ||
They actually advertise it as baby or infant water. | ||
Because, you know, obviously if it's about cavities, you're going to want to be giving it specifically to the people who don't have teeth yet. | ||
This is an IQ test, by the way. | ||
If you've had too much fluoride, you might fail it. | ||
But yeah, that's the good news. | ||
If you want to poison yourself and lower your IQ, More than allowed to do that. | ||
This is America after all. | ||
There's a weird assumption that like if you like something the government therefore has to secretly add it to the water supply for everyone. | ||
Like that's these are not the only options. | ||
The only options are not fluoride illegal or fluoride forced secretly on everybody. | ||
How about we don't add it to the water for people that don't want it and people that do want it are welcome to poison themselves. | ||
You're more than welcome. | ||
I encourage it. | ||
Go out. | ||
Buy your water with added fluoride. | ||
Have the best teeth in the world. | ||
You absolute morons. | ||
Meanwhile, total global tyranny alert from InfoWars.com. | ||
Starting Tuesday, white men in UK will be sentenced to longer prison sentences than women and non-whites. | ||
That's right, folks. | ||
The British have established a apartheid state in which they themselves are at the bottom. | ||
Why are they doing this? | ||
Well, why are they doing anything that they're doing? | ||
Because they're suicidal. | ||
Or, put another way, their governments are actively murdering their own people in every possible way. | ||
So the British Sentencing Council has decided that starting Tuesday, white men will be sentenced to longer prison sentences than women and ethnic minorities. | ||
Soros DAs in the U.S. already enforced this anti-white rule, but Only in the UK would they go so overboard and actually codify this into law. | ||
Labour is powerless to prevent two-tier justice measures coming into force next week after ministers were defied by the Sentencing Council. | ||
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said he was disappointed with the independent body's decision to press ahead with guidelines which will give minorities special treatment in the courts. | ||
The measures which take effect on Tuesday recommend all ethnic minorities and transgender people convicted of a crime should be treated differently by judges and magistrates After being convicted of a crime. | ||
Do I even need to comment on this? | ||
I mean, it's... | ||
It's beyond explanation. | ||
It is beyond understanding. | ||
It makes no sense. | ||
Just having two-tier policing in its own is sort of an anathema, a foundational violation of betrayal. | ||
Like everything that Europe is supposed to be about. | ||
So there's that. | ||
But it at least makes sense if it was targeted towards the minority groups or the ethnicities that were committing a disproportionate amount of crime. | ||
If you wanted to say, hey, we're going to have two-tier policing based off ethnicity, and this is a measure to try to overcome the We're good to | ||
go. Equality in the numbers of people who have been imprisoned. | ||
It's inexplicable. | ||
But there you go. | ||
And we'll get into that a little bit more. | ||
Because even just the last week in Britain, I'll just give you a taste. | ||
They busted up and arrested six people at a Quaker meeting house because those people were planning anti-war protests. | ||
Uh, they arrested parents who criticized an elementary school in a WhatsApp group. | ||
They've come out and openly established apartheid, two-tier, uh, sentencing against the people of their own country. | ||
They've shut down, like, the oldest steel mill, the last remaining steel mill in Britain. | ||
Just all of Europe, but Britain especially. | ||
Is being murdered right before our eyes. | ||
So we'll talk about that a little bit more later. | ||
Meanwhile, GOP headquarters in Albuquerque, New Mexico torched in deliberate arson attack with ice equals KKK spray painted on the wall. | ||
The entrance to the Republican Party of New Mexico's headquarters in Albuquerque was destroyed in a deliberate act of arson Sunday morning, according to experts. | ||
The Albuquerque Fire Department said they were dispatched to the call right before 6 a.m. | ||
And they said the fire was brought under control within five minutes of the crew's arrival, reports Stephanie Price of Fox News. | ||
The structure suffered damage to the front entryway and smoke damage throughout the building, the department said, and added that there were no injuries to civilians or firefighters reported. | ||
The fire department, along with Albuquerque Police Department, said this is an active and ongoing joint FBI-ATF investigation. | ||
It's just, of course, the latest Flare up of domestic terror from the left towards the right Of course you can just add it to the list the firebombing of Tesla dealerships the attacks on Tesla's continue Unabated nice. | ||
I actually saw an interesting Comment today that was or yesterday or whatever That was the fact that because the mainstream media is not reporting the Tesla Vandalization then the people Who watch mainstream media the lefties who are involved in this sort of thing? | ||
Don't understand that everybody is getting caught because Tesla's Have like a hundred cameras all over them and record them every time somebody goes up and scratches a swastika or just keys somebody's car Their face their face is filmed. | ||
Usually they like get into a car and their license plate is filmed so like they don't realize that like Every Tesla is covered in security cameras And every time you vandalize a Tesla, your face is being sent to the police and you're going to be arrested. | ||
They don't realize that because the mainstream media is not covering the vandalization against Tesla, especially, you know, in the way that they should be. | ||
And so they don't, the people don't realize that they're all getting caught. | ||
And so they keep doing it. | ||
So in a way, the mainstream media's refusal to cover leftist terror is Both creating more leftist terror, but also getting more leftist terrorists caught. | ||
That's kind of interesting. | ||
Again, we can pick that up later because the mainstream media is not spoon feeding people the reality that actually exists. | ||
So we'll do it for you. | ||
We'll spoon feed people because nobody else is and people seem incapable of recognizing patterns on their own but yes there is a massive and increasing pattern of leftist terror in this country but it's not new and it's been going on for a decade or more at this point and we'll get more into that later meanwhile judge rules this is in france judge rules | ||
marine le pen ineligible to run for presidency in 2027 in latest blow to democracy in europe a judge has ruled marine le pen is uh not is ineligible to run for office along with eight meps from her national rally party after they were found guilty of misappropriation of EU funds. | ||
The move is the latest attack on democracy in the EU, with judges increasingly deciding elections in Europe. | ||
Le Pen has also been sentenced to four years in prison, with two years suspended. | ||
Notably, the news comes right as Le Pen leads the polling for French presidential elections in 2027, as Remix News reported earlier today. | ||
The court estimated that the total losses amounted to $2.9 million as a result of paying by the European Parliament people who actually worked for the far-right party. | ||
Le Pen was found to be responsible for $1.8 million in damages herself. | ||
The judgment also concerns 12 assistants. | ||
Prosecutor's office initially alleged that $7 million had been used in this way. | ||
Investigators accused Le Pen of managing the illegal use of European subsidies between 2004 and 2016 when she served as an MEP. | ||
They stated that instead of working in Strasbourg, assistants were to work for Le Pen's National Rally Party in a domestic capacity. | ||
It was found that these people actually worked for the party and their deputy did not commission them any tasks, said the judge. | ||
Assistants then passed them from one deputy to another. | ||
It was not about combining the work of assistants but about combining the budget of MPs. | ||
None of it's actually legitimate. | ||
There's no actual, you know, crime That they had to uncover and are now charging her with. | ||
It's pretty simple. | ||
They just don't like her. | ||
So they're getting rid of her. | ||
I mean, it's the same thing that happened to Trump. | ||
She just, you know, was more vulnerable, I guess. | ||
But when there's a pattern repeated over and over and over again, it's pretty obvious that the excuse being given Is not reality. | ||
And again, it's like, especially what's happening in Europe. | ||
It's like, I shouldn't have to explain any of this stuff. | ||
Nobody should have to have this stuff explained to them. | ||
But somehow they're getting away with this crap. | ||
In Germany, they're desperately trying to ban AFD because it's so popular. | ||
Marine Le Pen pulls highest out of everybody in France for the next presidential, or for the poll for the next presidential election. | ||
So she's thrown in prison. | ||
They're canceling elections in Romania. | ||
France and Germany themselves both had far-right parties achieve massive gains in the recent elections only for the parliamentary cooperation of the far-left communists and the center-right to exclude the far-right from power. | ||
Basically, everywhere in Europe is just undergoing the Open metamorphosis the transformation into Just outright acknowledged dictatorships right now. | ||
It's just sort of a subtle parliamentary manipulation form of dictatorship, but They're moving on they're moving on to a new form in which politicians that oppose the new world order Are just gonna be arrested and sentenced to whatever crime they can stick them with Up to and including just like whatever positions they have. | ||
Oh, they're against immigration. | ||
Well, that's hate Hate's now illegal. | ||
Now they're going to be thrown in jail. | ||
So they're setting up a political system in which opposition parties are technically allowed, but participation in those parties and support of those parties' ideas is illegal, and everyone who gets to a point at which they have the political influence to threaten the ruling powers will just be put into jail. | ||
They'll just be thrown into prison. | ||
And so you'll get a lot more people like Nigel Farage Sort of gathering all of the dissident energy into himself and then capitulating on the most important points and making sure not to cross that line of opposing the establishment that gets you thrown into jail. | ||
So all they have to do is throw a couple people in jail and then everybody else gets the message and falls into line and opposition itself has been effectively eliminated. | ||
That happened this morning. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | |
Yes, the domestic terror is ramping up. | ||
But you'll notice something pretty stark and apparent with some of these leftist protests going on right now. | ||
And that is that the classic protests, the people going to the Tesla dealerships and waving signs and chanting, They're all old people. | ||
They're all boomers. | ||
It's all just like weirdo cat ladies and like, you know, old men who've fried their brains with weed in the 70s and never, never quite reconnected with reality. | ||
While meanwhile, all of the young people are throwing Molotov cocktails at GOP Center C. There's the Democrats have been simultaneously demoralized and radicalized to where the normal people in the Democratic Party recognize that it's over, that they allow themselves to be. | ||
And, you know, I don't get this. | ||
I don't get how it's like constant. | ||
There's this constant cycle. | ||
With the Democrats, especially. | ||
We're like they're wrong about something. | ||
They get told they're wrong about it. | ||
They fight tooth and nail. | ||
They call you all sorts of names for opposing it. | ||
They attack you for opposing the thing. | ||
They fight like hell in favor of the thing. | ||
And then like two years later, they all realize that the thing was always stupid from the get-go. | ||
And it's like, why can you not just understand this from the beginning? | ||
Why do we have to go through this two or three year cycle Where you just support evil and then admit that you're wrong two or three years later, but never quite admit that they're fully wrong. | ||
It's just like if you guys could just stop being retarded from the beginning, we wouldn't have to go through this. | ||
Gavin Newsom going, yeah, of course men and women shouldn't be playing on the same sports team. | ||
It's like, then why have you been fighting us over this for the last five years? | ||
What is wrong with you people? | ||
Why is it now that Bill Maher and Gavin Newsom and Jon Stewart, they're all just suddenly realizing what a giant scam all of the Democratic Party is. | ||
It's just like, why? | ||
Why though? | ||
But why are you people so insufferable? | ||
Why do we have to go through this over and over again? | ||
You'll notice we don't change our positions. | ||
We don't alter what we believe. | ||
Because what we believe is based in fact, in reality, in consciousness. | ||
These people allow themselves to support the most asinine policies. | ||
COVID is another one. | ||
And the most, you know, obvious and extreme version. | ||
Where for literally years, we were getting, like, you got kicked off the internet, you'd be fired for opposing What now everybody acknowledges like oh gee the school shutdown was actually pretty bad for you know kids growth and gee the economy sure did take a big blow when we shut down everybody. | ||
And it's just like can we can you guys just shut up? | ||
Can you just shut up and let us be right and just stop trying to argue against us because you always make fools out of yourselves. | ||
And when you When you finally realize, when it finally gets through, the nearly impenetrable force field around your head, when it finally breaks through, that you've been wrong the entire time, you have to admit it, and you have to acknowledge it, and you have to explain to us why you were so wrong. | ||
The Democrats right now are on this, it's like the mainstream normal Democrats, the Democratic celebrities, the Bill Mahers, these types of people, Jon Stewart, Jon Stewart and Bill Maher, both of them, multiple videos in the last week where they're just learning obvious crap about the Democrats, and they're just like, what? | ||
Oh my god, no way! | ||
And it's like, what the hell is wrong with you people? | ||
And you can't just, you can't just go, yeah, well, you know, the school shutdowns were bad, but like, we were really scared and we like thought it was, it's like, no, no, you're not allowed to justify your dumb ass decision. | ||
We didn't fall for it. | ||
You have no excuse to fall for it. | ||
You have to admit you were wrong and that your, your petulant, childlike, emotional incontinence allows you to constantly be manipulated into supporting the worst Most asinine policies and that you're stupid and bad for believing in them. | ||
Like we need an admission. | ||
I don't want to hear like, yeah, you know, it's about fairness and women and men be on the same sports team. | ||
It doesn't make any sense now that I think about it. | ||
Like, no, no, I want to hear it. | ||
Look, I'm a dumb idiot. | ||
I'm a dumb idiot. | ||
And I can't tell up from down. | ||
I have to be told the sky is blue. | ||
I can't think for myself. | ||
I'm stupid and hateful and when I when I feel like I have an excuse to to pin the facade of righteousness on my seething misery then I take it because I'm not a real human being. | ||
Like I need an admission from these people as to why and how they were tricked and how the ideas they believe are bad and how they shouldn't be trusted in the future because they've shown Time and time again that they're the most easily fooled Morons on earth like I need them to acknowledge that to recognize that to embrace that have the humility to voluntarily remove themselves From the thinking portion | ||
of America like you need to stop talking you stop expressing yourself You stop trying to understand or believe things you're incapable of it, and you need to have the humility to Self self-effacing this you need to have the the honor to admit just how wrong and stupid and miserable and Easily tricked you truly are okay. | ||
We need to understand this so they're going through it again right now as we speak They're being retarded morons. | ||
They're burning Tesla Cars they're burning down dealerships. | ||
They're firebombing GOP and and you know the point of this is that They're obviously never going to recognize how stupid they are. | ||
There's no capacity in their minds for humility. | ||
They don't have that, that part of their brains, the human part, it's missing. | ||
So they're not going to ignore, like they're in a constant state of sincere belief in whatever it is However contradictory and hypocritical their position is, whatever the current thing is, they're all in on it. | ||
So, I'm not actually waiting or expecting them to acknowledge the utter failure of everything they believe constantly. | ||
That's not going to happen. | ||
It should. | ||
It's not going to. | ||
The only solution is to institutionalize these people. | ||
Because they're never going to learn their lesson. | ||
Can only be like, you know after the hundredth time we have to just give up hope we have just like Understand that these people Are not People they're not really people I hate to say it but like there's there is some Necessary part of being a human that they're missing and it's unfortunate but | ||
It's destroying us. | ||
So we have to stop them just physically stop them. | ||
Okay, so we'll go to some of these videos of just some of the Tesla Protest events over the weekend. | ||
But before we do that, let's go to the video explaining what it is. | ||
They're protesting. | ||
I doubt they even understand this go to clip number one in this just just understand You're about to see a presentation by a Doge member about what they uncovered with Social Security And this is what these people are protesting. | ||
So we'll go to the protest in a second and you will see a cacophony of deranged boomers just shrieking like banshees and understand like they don't know what they're pro they don't understand they don't understand and like that's they genuinely like I I don't really feel sorry for them like I don't feel pity for them but And, | ||
you know, I don't, I'm, it's not my goal to dehumanize them, it's my goal to, like, just express how a real human being interprets this stuff. | ||
And it really is like watching a pack of monkeys, like, trying to do a puzzle. | ||
It's, it's not that I, like, I don't pity them. | ||
I'm just sort of like, just keep the monkeys in the cage. | ||
It's just like, it's fine. | ||
They can be monkeys. | ||
They can do whatever, like, stupid nonsense they want. | ||
They can throw poop at each other. | ||
All they want, just in a cage, away from me, away from the levers of power, away from the voting booth, just like, these people are bad. | ||
They're bad and evil, and they don't even understand what it is they're fighting for or against. | ||
They don't understand how anything works ever. | ||
We have to constantly go through this. | ||
So here's, here's just what Doge is doing. | ||
And they don't, it's like, try, you know, imagine showing this to one of the people at the Tesla protest and being like, what is it about this that has you out here on a Saturday morning foaming at the mouth and shrieking? | ||
What are you even protesting? | ||
They don't know, folks. | ||
They don't know. | ||
They have no idea. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
We started at the top of the system, mapping the whole system of social security to understand where all the fraud was. | ||
And there's a lot of great people there that showed us really a lot of waste. | ||
And so that came up with a big list of stuff they're working on. | ||
You've heard some of that already. | ||
But this is what jumped out at us. | ||
When we saw these numbers, we were like, what is this? | ||
In 21, you see 270,000 people. | ||
Goes all the way to 2.1 million in 24. These are non-citizens that are getting social security numbers. | ||
Yeah, this is a mind-blowing chart. | ||
Yeah, just... | ||
This literally blew us away. | ||
Like, we went there to find fraud, and we found this by accident. | ||
And this isn't political, by the way. | ||
My parents are immigrants. | ||
Yeah, this country's been great to us. | ||
My brother and sister were all born in Spain. | ||
I'm pro-legal immigration. | ||
This is not political. | ||
This is not political. | ||
This is about America, and the future of America. | ||
And there are a lot of good people in the system that pointed us in this direction. | ||
I want to honor them right now, that work in the government today, who took risks to show us these numbers and tell us what's going on. | ||
So I want to stop for a minute. | ||
I want to honor those people today. | ||
Very good people. | ||
Very good people. | ||
I have been from D.C. to Social Security offices, to the border, to track this down. | ||
And very good people have helped us along the way. | ||
I want to thank them. | ||
This number, what this is, ... is when you come in the country, if you're illegal, there's a couple ways to come in. | ||
You come in through a port of entry, and you can tell them you're afraid, and they'll give you an asylum case. | ||
You get an interview, then you get in. | ||
That's one way to do it. | ||
Another way to do it is to just go to the border. | ||
Literally this happened. | ||
I talked to border patrol myself. | ||
Elon was there too. | ||
I went to Laredo, and I went to Brownsville. | ||
Elon went to Eagle Pass. | ||
You walk up to a border patrol officer, and you tell them you want to come in. | ||
They have a couple of choices. | ||
They could charge you with a misdemeanor or a felony under 1325, or they can make an administrative offense, like a parking ticket, basically. | ||
They were told to do that, make an administrative offense, under the last administration. | ||
And then you go walk across the border, they, uh, do what's called a, uh, release from your own recognizance, and they give you an NTA, a Notice to Appear, which is to appear at a judge. | ||
The wait times on judges are, like, average six years. | ||
Look at GROC, you'll see it, on immigration judges. | ||
There's only 700 of them. | ||
This is 5.5 million people. | ||
Okay, so what happens then? | ||
Once you're in the country, and you've got asylum, do one of these pathways, we've mapped the whole thing out, you can apply for a work document. | ||
You file a 765, it's the work form, you get this form called the 766, that's the authorization, and then Social Security Administration automatically sends you in the mail your Social Security number. | ||
No interview. | ||
No idea. | ||
This is worth, like, just reiterating. | ||
It's not that... | ||
It's not... | ||
People sometimes think that under the Biden administration that he was simply asleep at the switch. | ||
He wasn't asleep... | ||
No. They were asleep at the switch. | ||
It was a massive, large-scale program to import as many illegals as possible, ultimately to change the entire voting map of the United States and disenfranchise the American people and make it a permanent, deep blue, one-party state from which there would be no escape. | ||
Look, if I hadn't seen this myself, I'm not sure I'd have believed it. | ||
I went through it myself and mapped it, and Ilana's right. | ||
This is true. | ||
The defaults in the system, from Social Security to all of the benefit programs, have been set to max inclusion, max pay for these people, and minimum collection. | ||
That's what's happening. | ||
We found 1.3 million of them already on Medicaid, as an example. | ||
We've gone through, on every benefit program we went through, we found groups from this particular group of people, this 5.5 million people in those benefit programs, And then what was really, really disturbing us was why. | ||
We're asking ourselves why. | ||
And so we actually just took a sample and looked at voter registration records. | ||
And we found people here registered to vote. | ||
In this population, yes. | ||
And who did vote? | ||
And we found some by sampling that actually did vote. | ||
And we have referred them to prosecution at the Homeland Security Investigation Service. | ||
Already. Already. | ||
That is already happening. | ||
So there's one of the Doge engineers Describing the way that they found hundreds of thousands of social security numbers given to illegal immigrants Some of which had actually voted in the election So not only are they tapping into social security that they've never paid into before But are in fact voting in the election and this is what is driving people to utter insanity going out and firebombing Tesla dealerships and attacking people I'll show you a video in just a | ||
second of a guy who was run over because he was Counter-protesting the Tesla dealership. | ||
So, I don't know what to do about the Democrats, but they live in a world, they operate with a mindset in which doge uncovering social security numbers being given to illegal immigrants and our birthright being stolen from us, the discovery of that is enough to make them want to kill people. | ||
It's crazy, but that's where we are. | ||
That's where we are at this point, and we got video after video to show you of exactly this. | ||
Let's go to clip number 19 here. | ||
This was posted by Luke Sly Walker. | ||
Clip 19. My friend Mary Davis, also known as Oliver Twist, conducted a little social experiment at the Tesla protests in Encinitas yesterday. | ||
This is a nice woman held up a sign saying, thank you, Elon, considering fact that he's gone out of his way and made sacrifices in order to hold the position that he's now in, uncovering the immense amounts of fraud taking place. | ||
Again, we've got numbers, too, I can get to here on the other side, but I believe they just uncovered another $5.3 billion in waste. | ||
Doge slashes $4.7 billion in spending, cuts Peru climate change activities, Mexican gender equality initiatives. | ||
The Department of Government officially has terminated 113 federal contracts totaling $4.7 billion including funding for climate change initiatives in Peru and gender equity programs in Mexico. | ||
So, saving us money, cutting billions of dollars of fraud and waste. | ||
And the people opposing that are so insane with rage that they're just like out attacking random strangers. | ||
Here's a video of Mary Davis, aka Oliver Twist, doing a little social experiment, seeing how tolerant the left truly is. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I'm actually going undercover as Oliver Twist today. | |
Yeah, so much out of any concern for anonymity normally, but for personal safety, I wasn't here but five minutes and I got threatened. | ||
I have been called Nazi, fascist. | ||
I was surrounded by three women that surrounded me and started calling for other people to come over and grab my pussy. | ||
I was blamed by a man for the firing of his daughter and the problem that she's now living in his backyard. | ||
And I asked him, well, where was your concern during COVID when they were cutting the federal workforce for the vaccine mandate? | ||
I later heard him relaying the story, and he actually lied to other people. | ||
And he said that I said it was a good thing his daughter was fired. | ||
So within the first probably 10 to 15 minutes, I found they will lie, gaslight, call you names. | ||
One woman called me ugly. | ||
So far out of probably the hundred encounters I've had with people, any type of conversation, only one, and that was one of the, She came up and checked on me to make sure that I would be okay getting to my car and I thanked her for her civility. | ||
Lastly, I'd like to remind everybody that this was a kind of social experiment for a litmus test to see how tolerant people really are of opinions and I'm trying to get people to realize that It's we the people, not Donkey and Elephant, and they are trying to keep us divided, so have an individual conversation with the labels, with the name-calling, reach out. | ||
If you think it's okay to, say, not clap for a 13-year-old cancer patient, or to vandalize a Tesla that turns out to be owned by a disabled woman in a wheelchair, then you're as much of the problem as anything that you're pointing your finger at. | ||
So I would like to Thank you, Mary Davis. | ||
There you go. | ||
She's holding a sign that says, thank you, Elon, on one side and tolerance test on the other. | ||
Yeah, they fail the tolerance test every time. | ||
But again, it's because they're stupid. | ||
Okay, I want to drive that home. | ||
Because the people at these protests are universally brain-fried boomer morons. | ||
Okay? Think I'm being unfair? | ||
You watch the video. | ||
Tell me if you disagree. | ||
Clip number 14. Boomer morons being boomer morons protesting Musk by doing the Nazi salute. | ||
These people are so stupid it's dangerous. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
What makes you guys want to come out here today in support of the fascism that's happening here in the United States? | |
Support the fascism? | ||
Well, you say Elon Musk is a Nazi. | ||
You see him do that? | ||
Yeah, like he's doing right now, right? | ||
unidentified
|
That's a Nazi. | |
I'm not a Nazi. | ||
Only Nazis want Musk. | ||
So you're not protesting because you want Elon Musk to be a Nazi? | ||
Is this obvious? | ||
Isn't this obvious? | ||
Well, only Nazis want Musk. | ||
unidentified
|
We're not Nazis. | |
Oh, you guys aren't Nazis. | ||
unidentified
|
And what makes Elon such a bad guy? | |
How about this as one thing? | ||
Who does that? | ||
He's doing the Nazi salute. | ||
unidentified
|
Hitler! I don't want Hitler. | |
And he's wiping out the government. | ||
You know, the Department of Education has done so much good. | ||
And the NIH, she has huge grant, $35 million grant with the NIH. | ||
Oh, what are you doing? | ||
They are wiping out the NIH. | ||
And they have 23-year-old people deciding what goes. | ||
Yeah, big balls is... | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. It's kind of like, why big balls? | |
This woman, she has a grant of $35 million. | ||
It's being taken away. | ||
Oh, and that makes him Hitler, does it? | ||
Selfish. Boomer morons throwing up the Roman salute to try to explain why Musk is so bad. | ||
Wearing masks five years after the pandemic ended. | ||
Again, like, yeah, are you gonna be... | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm not mad at those people. | ||
It's like watching one monkey throw poop at another. | ||
It's like, yeah, you know. | ||
They're gross, but that's just the way it is. | ||
They're gross, gross people. | ||
Let's go to clip 23 now. | ||
This is where these things are getting to. | ||
A man was run over by a vehicle because he was counter-protesting the Musk protests. | ||
Because, left-wing, they're all insane. | ||
Okay. And the people doing this, in particular, at the Tesla protests, are all universally Psychotic boomers. | ||
I mean, they're just psychotic boomers. | ||
Let's watch the psychotic boomer run over a Republican because of how righteous he is. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
We just learned that a 70-year-old man was arrested after Meridian Police say he hit another man with his car during today's demonstrations at the Tesla dealership in Meridian. | |
Police say 70-year-old Christopher Talbot of Meridian made an obscene gesture towards a counter protester and then hit him with his car. | ||
Police say the victim had been driving a truck with pro-Trump flags and had just parked and gotten out of his car when Talbot hit him. | ||
So a leftist runs over a pro-Trump, pro-Elon protester. | ||
And again, this isn't being spoon-fed to people by the mainstream media as being the rising tide of domestic terror. | ||
Violence from the left, you know, coming out and it has to be confronted and we have to have, you know, committee meetings about this. | ||
And reports about in 60-minute documentaries where they embed themselves with a leftist terror to try to expose the mindset behind these violent, civilizational threats. | ||
And you get none of that. | ||
Do you need it? | ||
Do you need somebody to spoon-feed you this? | ||
Or can you recognize for yourself the fact that the left is getting more deranged and more violent? | ||
unidentified
|
All right, folks, welcome back. | |
Second hour of American Journal is on. | ||
We have so much to talk about. | ||
This hour we'll be going to a... | ||
Pre-recorded interview in the third hour interview. | ||
I did yesterday with Sargon of Akkad aka Carl Benjamin and Okay, all right, I just I just have so much to get to it because I want to talk about the UK I also want to talk about the threat of war with Iran leaked documents that Kenneth Klippenstein Has released showing that America already has war plans drawn up including the Possibility of nuking Iran our nuclear bombers | ||
already in the air Making sorties over Iraq and Syria as a signal to Iran that we are willing to nuke them So that Israel can continue its genocide in Gaza Completely insane, but that's where we are. | ||
I'll show you those videos and those documents have been released, but we're talking about domestic terror from the left Firebombing yet another GOP headquarters. | ||
I think this is at least the third GOP headquarters that has been firebombed in the last five years Because this is a trend because this is a trend and it's increasing and their violence is only going to escalate their insanity is only going to metastasize And while what they're doing is not actually effective or, | ||
you know, gaining them any followers or support, they are terrorists, so they need to be dealt with severely. | ||
And again, we'll show this video. | ||
This, I think, illustrates perhaps better than any other video, the dichotomy at play here. | ||
Who's on either side? | ||
We've got a young guy having fun. | ||
Trolling people in his cyber truck and old bitter psychotic boomers attacking him. | ||
Let's watch clip number three. | ||
unidentified
|
You see a young guy in the Cybertruck and the old crone. | |
Get off my f***ing car. | ||
You touch that shit again, I will break your f***ing face. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, come on, bring it on. | |
You can bring it on, bring it on, bring it on. | ||
Bring it on, bring it on, says the old lady. | ||
unidentified
|
That's it. | |
Oh, look, it's them throwing up the middle fingers. | ||
Look at all those old boomers. | ||
I mean, there is more white hair than pink hair in this crowd. | ||
And that's saying something. | ||
It's a bunch of old boomer women with lesbian haircuts threatening young guys to fight. | ||
I mean, these people are psychotic. | ||
They're insane. | ||
They're morons. | ||
They're utterly disconnected to reality. | ||
I wanted to go back and turn to the crowd again because I really want you all to soak in just how much gray hair is on display here. | ||
unidentified
|
Look at these pudgy little soy boy weirdos. | |
Look at this dude with his gut sticking out of his t-shirt. | ||
Look at this old man. | ||
It's a bunch of old weirdos. | ||
That to the left is now old boomer out-of-touch weirdos. | ||
Who think they're like reliving the glory days of the Civil Rights Act. | ||
As they, you know, shout through their dentures at some young successful kid. | ||
Like... Alright, let's be fair. | ||
They're not all old boomers. | ||
There are also pudgy millennials. | ||
There are pudgy gay millennials and old psychotic boomers. | ||
And that's who we're dealing with. | ||
Gender obscure individuals. | ||
If we can play that video again and just pause it when it first turns around to the crowd. | ||
That image is really shows you everything you need to know. | ||
Look at all that gray hair. | ||
It's all old boomers. | ||
It's weird. | ||
And it's like, okay, so where are the young people? | ||
Usually it's young people that Go out and protest. | ||
Usually it's the young people that can be activated to go out and take to the streets and be violent morons because they're young and impressionable. | ||
So why is it all old people? | ||
Because all of the young people have given up on protesting. | ||
All the young people are not out there waving signs. | ||
They have completely been disillusioned with the political process. | ||
The young people are in discord. | ||
Organizing actual violence. | ||
Yeah, and then there's this guy. | ||
And then there's that guy. | ||
Psychotic boomers. | ||
All right, we'll be back, folks. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
This is the American Journal. | ||
But today, my categories of news are almost all the names of foreign countries. | ||
Because we have a lot of news around the world of imminent importance. | ||
And I think I'll go first this video. | ||
I'm not going to be able to play nearly the whole thing. | ||
The whole video is about 60 minutes long, but it'll make a nice intro to what we'll talk about, which is leaked documents showing war plans against Iran. | ||
We'll start off with that, and then we'll get into Russia as well. | ||
But both of these war zones are... | ||
are heating up as we speak. | ||
Putin making some very aggressive statements as Trump apparently is angry and pissed off at him threatening new tariffs. | ||
Zelensky is flip-flopping on the minerals deal. | ||
France and England are beating war drum. | ||
Germany as well, talking about having a military force in Ukraine under European control to face off against Russia. | ||
They're doing everything they can to create the conditions for continued and more widespread war in Eastern Europe. | ||
But the Middle East remains, to me, the most dangerous flashpoint for all of this. | ||
And I have heard from sources close to the military-industrial complex that Israel is gearing up for strikes on Iran as early as this week. | ||
And I heard that On Friday and then throughout the weekend news story after news story certainly fell into line with that rumor. | ||
So let's go to clip number 11. This is from Propaganda and Co on X. I'll get you their exact handle so you can follow them and watch this whole video but starting off they lay out not just the leaked documents from Ken Klippenstein that I'll read you in just a second but | ||
actions that are going unreported in western mainstream news but that are of supreme importance to people in the middle east and all this has occurred over the last month or so let's go now to this video by propaganda and co let's Would the United States actually go to war with Iran, and if so, Would they use a nuclear weapon? | ||
It sounds like a ridiculous question until you realize the war has already started. | ||
The nukes are already deployed and no one told you. | ||
Documents recently revealed top-secret war plans, covert operations, assassinations, bomber runs, and cyber attacks. | ||
And private contractors have been warned that just whispering about their assignments could land them in federal prison. | ||
All of it already in motion. | ||
All of it classified at the highest levels. | ||
All of it pointed at Iran. | ||
This is as high stakes as it gets. | ||
Because what if things spiral out of control? | ||
What begins over the skies of Iran could ripple across the Arabian Peninsula, the Red Sea, the Mediterranean, the world. | ||
It could crash global markets, collapse supply chains, and yes, maybe even bring back the unthinkable. | ||
A nuclear strike. | ||
This isn't speculation. | ||
It's all laid out, plain as day, in Pentagon documents and statements from the Trump administration. | ||
only question now is how far are they willing to go On February 20th, two B-52 bombers took off from a secret U.S. base in Qatar. | ||
Their mission? | ||
Drop bombs on targets in Iraq. | ||
U.S. Central Command called it a Quote, | ||
about this event. | ||
If you google it, you'll find almost nothing from major US media outlets. | ||
And that's odd, especially considering how obsessed the media used to be with Trump doing anything even remotely provocative. | ||
Two weeks after the bombing run in Iraq, things escalated on March 3rd. | ||
This time, a US B-52 bomber flew over the Mediterranean, flanked by Israeli F-15s, F-35s, and F-35s. | ||
and British fighter jets. | ||
The operation involved long-range mission simulations and aerial refueling. | ||
Clear signs of preparation for extended-range strikes, like one on Iran. | ||
This drill barely made a blip in Western media. | ||
But in Israel, in likely message to Iran, Israeli and U.S. | ||
Air Forces carry out, quote, joint drill with heavy bomber. | ||
The drill was possibly aimed at preparing for a joint strike on Iran. | ||
Israeli outlets didn't ignore the intent, but the U.S. | ||
media did. | ||
These weren't routine drills. | ||
They were rehearsals for war. | ||
Soon after these drills, real airstrikes followed. | ||
This time on the leadership of Ansarallah, aka the Houthis in Yemen. | ||
No one is pretending the Houthis act alone. | ||
They are backed by Iran. | ||
And this time, the White House was crystal clear about the target. | ||
unidentified
|
National Security Advisor Mike Waltz said in a televised This was an overwhelming response that actually targeted multiple Houthi leaders and took them out. | |
The difference here is one, going after the Houthi leadership, and two, holding Iran responsible. | ||
It is Iran that has repeatedly funded, resourced, Yes, the Houthis did relaunch their Red Sea blockade in solidarity with Gaza. | ||
But according to Waltz, it was a message to Iran. | ||
And yet the mainstream media stuck to the Pentagon's script, the sanitized version. | ||
Degrading Houthi capabilities. | ||
Protecting freedom of navigation. | ||
Ken Klippenstein, an independent journalist tracking this story, put it bluntly, He pointed to the New York Times, which described Trump's escalation as, quote, similar to past strikes. | ||
But Klippenstein corrected them, quote, Biden never targeted Houthi leadership. | ||
Trump has entered uncharted waters. | ||
Meanwhile, Trump is making no secret of his intentions. | ||
On his platform, Truth Social, he wrote, Iran will be held responsible and suffer the consequences. | ||
Those consequences will be dire. | ||
And a month prior, Trump revealed that he had sent Iran a letter. | ||
I hope you're going to negotiate, because if we have to go in militarily, it's going to be a terrible thing for them. | ||
Alright, so again, that whole video from Propaganda& Co. | ||
is about 15 minutes long. | ||
You can find it and follow them on X at prop and co all spelled out prop and co. | ||
And it was just a little teaser there, but I thought the two stories of the bombing sorties or the simulated bombing sorties of American and, | ||
It's These are things that are as he points out going unreported in Western media, but are clearly signals to Iran Having to do with nuclear weapons now In there he talked about a letter that Trump sent to Iran in threatening that we'll have to go in militarily Threatening that they won't like the consequences if they keep it up now I want to remember as we continue | ||
to talk about this the the framing and understanding of this has to be holistic you have to understand that like All of the war saber-rattling with Iran, all of our conflict with Iran. | ||
It's not actually America doing this. | ||
This is all for the sake of Israel, specifically so that Israel can continue to slaughter Palestinians and ethnically cleanse Gaza without interference from other Arab groups. | ||
So as we play nuclear chicken here, as we go As we go ever closer to the edge of the abyss, beyond which World War III, nuclear exchange, | ||
total obliteration occurs, understand that that's all not for the survival and continuing existence of Israel, but for their ability to continue to murder people unencumbered. | ||
Okay? Just so we're clear and have a firm footing as we talk about what all this is about, Iran's not threatening us. | ||
They've been two weeks away from having a nuclear bomb for the last 30 years. | ||
Tells you how legitimate the threat is. | ||
And all of this could be stopped if America would stop supplying Israel with weapons and defending Israel in places like the UN. | ||
So just understand where, you know, what all this is over. | ||
Okay, so Iran responds to Trump letter with rejection of direct negotiations with the U.S. Iran's president said Sunday that the Islamic Republic rejected direct negotiations with the United States over its rapidly advancing nuclear program, offering Tehran's first response to a letter President Trump sent the country's supreme leader. | ||
President Massoud Peshachian said Iran's response delivered via the Sultanate of Oman Let's We're | ||
Don't avoid talks. | ||
It's the breach of promises that has caused issues for us so far. | ||
They must prove that they can build trust. | ||
The White House, State Department and other officials offered no immediate reaction to the announcement. | ||
However, Mr. | ||
Trump said that before Mr. | ||
Pezichin's, I know I'm mispronouncing that, but there it is, comments he was... | ||
Considering military action and secondary tariffs if Iran does not agree to a nuclear deal. | ||
Quote, if they don't make a deal there will be bombing and there will be bombing the likes of which they've never seen before, said Mr. Trump in a comment aired Sunday by NBC News. | ||
Having Mr. Pesashian announce the decision shows just how much has changed in Iran since his election half a year ago when he campaigned on a promise to re-engage with the West. | ||
Since Mr. Trump's election and the resumption of his maximum pressure campaign on Tehran, Iran's rial currency has gone into freefall. | ||
Mr. Pazishian has opened up talks to until Iran's 85-year-old Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei came down hard on Mr. Trump in February and warned that talks are not intelligent, wise, or honorable with his administration. | ||
The Iranian president then immediately toughened his own remarks on the U.S. And again, that's because Uh, that's because America and Israel totally changed the, you know, negotiation starting point. | ||
It was always about Iran's nuclear program. | ||
And then as soon as Trump got into office, they were like, actually, our demand is that Iran dismantle its entire ballistic missile program, which is just an obvious non-starter. | ||
It was never going to happen. | ||
It just doesn't make any sense. | ||
And so Iran is like, all right, you're not arguing in good faith. | ||
These negotiations are not You know happening in it with a with an air of mutual trust Instead you are trying everything you can to put us in the most disadvantaged position making demands You know we can't meet in order to put the onus on us and you know claim that we're the ones responsible for You know military action if it were to commence so So what are we doing? | ||
So why are we doing this? | ||
Why are we seemingly on the cusp of yet another Middle East war when we've been through two, three, up to five? | ||
I mean, depends on how you count it. | ||
But no matter how many distinct wars in the Middle East America has participated in or started or helped to fund the rebels, it's all been disastrous. | ||
Every single one of them. | ||
I'd put it up to five right you've got Afghanistan total disaster total embarrassment wasting millions of light or millions of well billions of dollars trillions of dollars perhaps hundreds of thousands of lives only to unceremoniously and and Really embarrassingly flee the country Letting more of our soldiers die as we leave behind billions of dollars of weaponry Iraq obviously total disaster total boondoggle One | ||
of the worst mistakes America has ever made. | ||
Again, almost beat for beat exactly what we're doing again. | ||
Iran has weapons of mass destruction, you guys. | ||
Are we really gonna fall for this again? | ||
Totally ridiculous. | ||
You have Libya, of course. | ||
Fall of Qaddafi. | ||
Opening up the migrant channels into Europe. | ||
We came, we saw, he died. | ||
Our ambassador being murdered in Benghazi as we transferred Sidewinder missiles. | ||
To the rebels in Syria that would be my fourth would be Syria now Syria has a Islamist ISIS Al Qaeda Leadership that is massacring Alawites and Christians By the hundreds of thousands or by the tens of thousands at least So, I mean what is so so So, what are we doing here? | ||
Like it's what it's one thing if you have like a sunk cost fallacy where you're like man We're already in it so deep. | ||
We got to just keep going to make it all worth it at the end of the day, but What is the goal here like a sunk cost fallacy? | ||
It's something that happens when like you're gambling and you're like man. | ||
I've already put in a thousand dollars to this machine. | ||
I Better just keep going or else. | ||
I'll never make that back like if I stop now I just lose a thousand bucks, but if I keep going I have the potential of hitting the jackpot and Maybe I've spent another 2,000, but then I get 50,000. | ||
There's there's like a reward at the end What is the reward at the end of Middle East war wars? | ||
What is the sunk cost fallacy? | ||
Promising here Well, we've already spent trillions of dollars and millions of lives and all of you know American resources. | ||
We've sacrificed Decades of growth we've destroyed our reputation overseas. | ||
We've just caused nothing but problems, but if we keep going then We it'll just get worse like what the Middle East will just love us all of the sudden I mean thinking about this to like in the mindset of Trump the only way I can justify this is He just wants to solve the problem once and for all and he doesn't particularly care how it's solved Which I can kind of understand where he's looking at this problem this intractable conflict for decades in the Middle | ||
East and he's like If we just wipe these people out, then we can just stop worrying about this. | ||
Right? If you just destroy Iran and destroy Gaza, then you can just stop worrying about it. | ||
It can just end this interminable conflict. | ||
But there are other ways to end this interminable conflict. | ||
One of them would be to stop supplying Israel everything at once. | ||
That would cause the conflict to come to a rather speedy and peaceful end. | ||
But we're not doing that. | ||
So, Iran leader pledges firm retaliatory response to U.S. | ||
and Israel after Trump threat. | ||
The Supreme Leader Khamenei said any attack by the U.S. | ||
or Israel would be met with a firm retaliatory strike after U.S. | ||
President Trump threatened to bomb Iran unless signs of a deal renouncing nuclear weapons. | ||
Still, in the televised remarks on Monday, Khamenei downplayed the likelihood of such an outcome, characterizing it as highly unlikely. | ||
His remarks follow a period of heightened tensions between Tehran and Washington. | ||
Iranian Prime Minister Abbas Araghchi said last week that there would be no direct negotiations with the U.S. as long as the Trump administration maintains its military threats. | ||
In an interview with NBC News over the weekend, Trump said if they don't make a deal there will be bombing. | ||
Again, I see this as a flagrant betrayal of his promises on the campaign. | ||
Now you can argue like well, this is just Trump's negotiation tactic There's not actually gonna be a war in Iran, but we don't have the capability to make that promise because if Israel bombs Iran's nuclear sites or does just a massive bombing campaign across Iran and Iran unleashes its ballistic missile Stores which are innumerable like just unbelievably massive Cities underground | ||
full of missiles. | ||
They have the ability to wipe out Israel, if they wanted to. | ||
And the Iron Dome can't stop it. | ||
Israel has nuclear weapons. | ||
So, it seems like now, and according to Ken Klippenstein, who received these classified documents, America is actually considering and has plans drawn up To use nuclear weapons in Iran To prevent Israel using nuclear weapons in Iran now, | ||
it seems like a strange justification But that's what they're saying themselves Quote we can't let them have nuclear a nuclear weapon Trump says I would rather have a peace deal than the other option, but the other option will solve the problem So he just wants to like solve the problem But that's stupid. | ||
He's being advised by Israelis who are PSYOPing America into a suicidal attack against their enemies. | ||
And they're the only voices, you know, in the room that are advising Trump on this. | ||
To the casual observer, that might sound like more of targeted airstrikes the U.S. has been doing, but behind the scenes, as the Pentagon prepares for a major regional war with Iran, the use of nuclear weapons is on the table. | ||
The new Iran war preparations that have been underway since last year, including new nuclear options. | ||
Quote, reintroducing nuclear deterrence, the officer says, serves three purposes. | ||
One, to directly deter Iran from developing nuclear weapons or then from using them. | ||
Two, to convince Israel not to use its own nuclear weapons, that is, by making it clear that the U.S. equally would or could preempt Iran if something dire happened. | ||
And three, to dissuade Saudi Arabia from perceiving that it has to develop its own nuclear weapons because Iran is doing so. | ||
To implement these seemingly unconnected national objectives, Central Command, CENTCOM, the U.S. Combatant Command for the Middle East, is charged with maintaining capabilities to back up Washington. | ||
Today, for instance, the White House claimed that in a telephone call between Trump and Putin, that the two agreed, quote, that Iran should never be in a position to destroy Israel. | ||
To Washington, an Iran nuclear program is just destroy Israel spelled another way. | ||
And it goes on to explain sort of the evolving The the evolving stance of nuclear weapons in the Middle East First in the Cold War era then in the war on terror era now. | ||
We're in the Trump era and Ken Klippenstein says this I described yesterday the general development of the war plans against Iran buried within those plans I've learned from procurement documents in corporate internal communications including a renewed focus on nuclear weapons the basic framework of Oh plan 1025 persists but behind the sea Iran strategy counter Iran strategy to go. | ||
Iranian leadership, either with kinetic or non-kinetic means, including covert and cyber actions and special operation forces, lurked the nuclear options. | ||
As part of the current SEED project that I described yesterday, there is a more highly classified nuclear planning effort. | ||
Escalating an Iran conflict to the nuclear option can originate in two ways. | ||
One, with the CENTCOM commander requesting the use of nuclear weapons, mostly to stave off Iranian conventional military success. | ||
And two, a top-down order that is by the President, mostly as a demonstration to signal to Iran. | ||
Once again, the Trident II low-yield option is in Donald Trump's hands. | ||
A submarine can stealthily deploy, the White House can decide, and the White House can decide. | ||
This is the problem of having secret and unexamined plans. | ||
The option is now available to the President. | ||
In the decade or so I've been reporting I don't recall ever once writing about nuclear weapons not because it wasn't important But I didn't take it seriously and it never seemed real now the nuclear threat seems very much a live issue With the latest generation of detailed military planning that could be put in motion anytime But in by a single person who has already shown himself to have a much bigger appetite for risk even than in the first time So again, | ||
there are plans drawn up now to use nuclear weapons against Iran The question is why and for what purpose and is it worth it and what do we have to do to decouple from Israel and actually prioritize America for once and not get involved in yet another Middle East conflagration again. | ||
unidentified
|
back folks. | |
We're talking about World War III and how to fight. | ||
Trump getting elected in no small part because of his promise to end the conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East Both of them seem closer to you know full-fledged World War than ever before It's getting and it's getting a little bit dangerous just to finish up with the With the Middle East Because | ||
we could go on and on about this. | ||
White House cuts funding for Al-Qaeda linked NGO in Syria. | ||
The White House has terminated tens of millions of dollars for funding for the White Helmets, the Al-Qaeda-affiliated NGO that played a key role in the U.S.-backed regime change war in Syria. | ||
As part of the broader CIA-backed war to topple the government of Bashar al-Assad and bring Hayat Tahir al-Sham HTS to power. | ||
So, you know, it's one of those things where it's like, the White House is cutting funding for an al-Qaeda-linked NGO in Syria. | ||
Okay, first of all, why were we ever funding an al-Qaeda-linked group? | ||
That seems a little bit odd. | ||
Secondly, good, I'm glad it's being ended. | ||
Third, is it not being ended because they succeeded in their mission? | ||
Is this not, I mean they did it, right? | ||
They ousted Bashar al-Assad, they ushered in the Islamist, you know, extremist regime to replace him, so now they can cut the funding because a mission accomplished, objective achieved. | ||
So yeah, they can end the funding now. | ||
They don't need to be sponsoring them anymore. | ||
Now they can sponsor themselves off the taxpayer tax dollars that they Meanwhile, as a result of all of this, as a result of our PSYOP activities in Syria and our funding of the rebels, i.e. | ||
ISIS, Alawite and Christians, behind Syria's silent sectarian slaughter, the massacres and repression of Alawites and Christians in Syria began immediately after the fall of Damascus, And have continued for the past three and a half months. | ||
On the 7th of December 2024, the day after the capital city fell to Idlib-based militants, Israel began bombing Syrian territory and deployed tanks in the country's south. | ||
Yet the barrels of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and its affiliated Salafi extremist groups, who've taken control of Damascus, were not pointed at Israel, but a serious Alawite population. | ||
What began as attacks on Alawite and Christian religious sites quickly turned into the systematic slaughter of Alawites in a campaign of ethnic cleansing. | ||
So there you go. | ||
HTS gets into power because of American and Israeli and Western Turkish intervention. | ||
Immediately starts slaughtering the minorities, the Alawites, that is less extreme, more moderate Muslims that Bashar al-Assad was a member of that faction. | ||
That's why, you know, pictures of he and his wife, they look straight up Western. | ||
He could very well be the president of France and nobody would Question it now. | ||
With HTS in power, the president looks like a Muslim Zelensky and his wife is covered head to toe in a burqa and stands 10 feet away and slightly behind him in their official photos. | ||
And then the EU invited him to give a talk in Brussels and gave him billions of dollars while simultaneously he was massacring Alawites and Christians because there is no principle guiding Thanks for watching. | ||
standing up to Israel so that Israel can make the greater Israel project. | ||
And maybe we'll nuke Iran to achieve that goal. | ||
Of course, the slaughter in Gaza has not ended. | ||
Bodies of missing aid workers found in Gaza mass grave following Israeli attacks. | ||
The bodies of more than a dozen aid workers have been recovered in southern Gaza from what a United Nations agency described as a mass grave a week after they went missing following attacks by Israeli forces. | ||
Eight out of the 14 bodies recovered Sunday from the site in southern Rafah area were identified as members of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society, five as civilian defense, and one as a UN agency employee PRCS We're good to | ||
go. So we're gonna nuke Iran to make sure that continues, okay, because the other option would be to not Blow up ambulances and fire trucks and kill aid workers, but that's an unacceptable possibility apparently So that's what's happening in the Middle East now. | ||
Let's Now let's move on to Europe shall we Trump is very angry and pissed off at Putin threatens new tariffs again I don't even get this this doesn't even make any sense as As this article We're good to | ||
This week, Russia has indicated that the question of the Black Sea ceasefire is still being negotiated and is awaiting the removal of sanctions on agricultural exports, which necessitates specific banks being reconnected to the SWIFT payment system. | ||
But Europe has said that no, it won't go along with plans, which may result in easing sanctions, as Europe is doing everything it can to continue this conflict. | ||
Meanwhile, Russia is not backing down, is feeling very in not only Ukraine, but in any conflict against Europe at all. | ||
We can go down to a statement by Vladimir Putin, clip number 12. Here is Putin talking about the state of affairs in Ukraine and how he's under no obligation or even, you know, significant pressure to slow down military activity because they're winning handily. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
He says there is a reason to believe, as I just said recently, we're going to crush them. | ||
If there's reason to believe, then we'll finish it off. | ||
I think the only thing left is for the realization to come to the Ukrainian people themselves about what's happening. | ||
And the fact is that our armed forces are gaining momentum. | ||
They're acting more and more effectively. | ||
So he's just like, we don't need peace. | ||
We're only getting better. | ||
We're moving forward. | ||
Ukraine defenses are collapsing. | ||
They're being propped up for the time being by American assistance and military resources. | ||
But Europe really has nothing to back them up with. | ||
It's over. | ||
It's over. | ||
And the longer it goes, the worse it gets for Ukraine. | ||
So, again, he's not in any position to be dictated terms. | ||
Zelensky and Ukraine should be doing everything they possibly can to bring about peace because the longer it goes before peace is resolved, the worse it is for them. | ||
Russia is not feeling boxed in. | ||
They're not feeling You know, the pressure of military action from Europe. | ||
Europe's doing everything it can to rattle its sabers and bang its war drum, but he knows they have nothing. | ||
And by the way, they've just launched the PERM, a Project 885M Yassin-class nuclear-powered submarine from Murmansk. | ||
It's the first submarine to be equipped with Zircon hypersonic cruise missiles as a standard feature. | ||
The Zircon missile travels at Mach 9 with a range of 560 miles, making it extremely difficult to intercept. | ||
This nuclear-powered submarine was seen during a flag-raising ceremony at the Naval Base in That's a different one, rather. | ||
Russian President Vladimir Putin has officially launched the nuclear-powered submarine Perm, the latest addition to Russia's naval arsenal, equipped with advanced hypersonic Zircon missiles. | ||
The launch took place via video link from the Arctic port of Murmansk, where Putin issued the command, I hereby authorize. | ||
The Russian state agencies have confirmed that Perm is the first nuclear submarine to have Zircon missiles as a standard armament, enhancing its strategic capabilities. | ||
The Zircon missile, known as the 3M22 Zircon, is capable of reaching speeds up to Mach 9, has an operational range of approximately 900 kilometers, that's 560 miles. | ||
These attributes make it extremely difficult to intercept, giving the submarine a significant edge in modern naval warfare. | ||
The missile is designed for both anti-ship and land attack roles with the ability to carry conventional nuclear warheads, conventional or nuclear warheads. | ||
Military analysts highlight the introduction of Zircon missiles on submarines like Perm, significantly reduces response time for enemy defenses and enhances the capability to strike fortified targets. | ||
Putin has previously pointed out that these weapons have no analogs in any country in the world. | ||
The development of Zircon missiles began in the early 2010s with its existence first publicly acknowledged in 2016. | ||
Test launches conducted between 2017 and 2019 demonstrates... | ||
He will die soon And the time I remember thinking, I don't think I said the statement, but a lot of times people like this make these statements and it's because they know of something that's coming, | ||
right? I pointed out that Victoria Nuland put out a statement of Trump is not going to be the next president and smirking just before The first assassination attempt on him in Butler, Pennsylvania, just like how Joe Biden said the Nord Stream 2 pipeline certainly would not be operational with a little smirk. | ||
And then you had Zelensky saying Putin would die soon. | ||
And it just struck me as very similar to those previous statements. | ||
And lo and behold, the very next day, Putin's limo exploded in front of the FSB headquarters three days after Zelensky predicted Russian president's imminent death. | ||
One of Russian President Vladimir Putin's limos exploded near Moscow's FSB Secret Service headquarters Saturday, according to reports. | ||
The vehicle is believed to be part of Putin's official car fleet. | ||
Alex Jones broke down the latest on what could be the most dangerous escalation in a now three-year war against Russia and Ukraine. | ||
Notably, just three days ago on Wednesday, Ukrainian President Zelensky claimed Putin, quote, will die soon and the ongoing war will come to an end. | ||
Very Suspicious coincidence happening there. | ||
But this is the way these people operate. | ||
They're going to try to kill Putin and think that's going to solve everything. | ||
I don't think it will. | ||
The EU is clearly, desperately trying to ramp up their military capabilities as they understand America is not eager for direct confrontation with Russia. | ||
And they're thinking, well, we'll just have to do it ourselves anyway. | ||
EU quote preparing for war, according to a member state. | ||
Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Something has accused Brussels of Brussels bureaucrats of clinging to a failed pro-war policy in a desperate attempt to delay the moment when European taxpayers begin asking where the money spent on bankrolling Kiev is gone. | ||
The European Union recently advised its 450 million inhabitants to stockpile essential supplies for at least 72 hours, with the EU Commissioner for Crisis Management warning on Wednesday that the Ukraine conflict threatens the bloc's overall security. | ||
The minister from Hungary said he initially thought the warning was some kind of joke or trolling. | ||
Vladimir Labib, the crisis management commissioner, posted a bizarre video showing Europeans what to pack in a 72-hour survival kit. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
There's only one explanation. | ||
Brussels is preparing for war. | ||
At a time when there's finally a real chance for a ceasefire and meaningful peace talks with President Donald Trump's return to office, Brussels is going in the opposite direction, clinging to a failed pro-war policy. | ||
Why? Because as long as the war continues, pro-war European politicians can avoid taking responsibility for three wars of failure and avoid answering an extremely uncomfortable question, where is the money that was sent to Ukraine? | ||
But beyond that, I mean war only accelerates everything Europe is already doing to itself as we've explained over and over whether it's censorship or economic re-evaluation or mass murder and the deliberate genocide against the European people like all of that would be massively accelerated if you can get them into a shooting match with Russia. | ||
This would be like the final death blow to white people, basically. | ||
They're setting it up once again where all of Europe goes to war with itself, kills millions of its own people, and comes out on the other side in total oppression and in a situation where they can be thoroughly dismantled forever once and for all. | ||
And so the European leadership is of course going along with this. | ||
French President Macron announces plans for a reassurance force in Ukraine in 12 EU countries. | ||
I'm sorry, this printed the wrong article, it looks like. | ||
This is all about women's health. | ||
It's kind of typical, isn't it? | ||
Actually, it's kind of perfect. | ||
The French president is like, we're going to go to war in Ukraine. | ||
And then the article is like, How is this going to affect women's mental health? | ||
It's kind of perfect. | ||
Completely insane. | ||
So the French leader, after two pages of women's health, I don't know why it talks about that. | ||
French leader said, did not need every country at the summit to agree with his plan. | ||
It's not unanimous, but we do not need a unanimity to achieve it. | ||
The question of sending troops to Ukraine has created stark division amongst EU and NATO allies. | ||
Prime Minister Giorgio Maloney said that Italy will not participate in this plan while her Polish counterpart Donald Tusk said last month We do not plan to send Polish soldiers into the territory of Ukraine while Macron expressed his wish for US support in the case of Ukraine to European deployment he also stressed the need to prepare a scenario where Europe has to be independent Yeah, | ||
good luck with that Good luck with that boys but again, it's I mean everything has to be understood in the paradigm of Europe being suicidal. | ||
So it's like, there is nothing in Europe that they're even interested in protecting or defending. | ||
The things that actually made Europe worth defending have all been largely eradicated at this point. | ||
It's what JD Vance's speech was about, saying, what are you fighting for? | ||
And the answer is nothing. | ||
The answer is nothing. | ||
They aren't fighting for anything. | ||
They're doing everything they can to disadvantage, disenfranchise, and ultimately kill their own people. | ||
And the UK is the premier example in this regard. | ||
And I'll get to that in just a second. | ||
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I'm not gonna go to them, but like I guess there was some big Islamic holiday over the weekend I don't know what it is, but basically there's videos from every single European city of tens of thousands of Muslims taking over the city squares or stadiums or whatever there's also just like Video I guess what we can play clip 7 here because it's just an image that you see across all of | ||
Europe ever since they opened their borders to the Muslim invasion clip number 7 French police were forced to flee After being attacked by a migrant gang, let's just... | ||
And so you can see the war zone that Europe has turned into with hordes of foreigners driving the police away and creating no-go zones in the heart of European capitals. | ||
Just one example of dozens over the weekend of this type of event happening as the French police flee. | ||
Absolutely running away with their tails between their legs from the Muslim invasion. | ||
But let's talk about the UK because we're about to go to a video of or an interview that I did with Sargon of Akkad and we get into a little bit on the UK. | ||
But let me just give you these headlines. | ||
Sentencing council defies government as it vows two-tier punishments will happen. | ||
Prime Minister says all options on the table as he prepares to face down judge. | ||
But yeah, the measures which will take effect on Tuesday recommend all ethnic minorities and transgender people convicted of a crime should be treated differently by judges and magistrates after being convicted of a crime. | ||
Their sentencing will now be lessened and only white men will face the full brunt and the full appropriate sentences for crimes they commit, effectively creating an apartheid system in which the native-born Britain's on the bottom tier to be subjected to increased oppression in favor of the foreign invaders that are destroying the country. | ||
But it's not going to slow down anytime soon. | ||
Quote, Britain must rely on immigration to compensate for falling birth rate. | ||
A rise in women choosing to have children later in life means Britain must rely on immigration to boost its birth rate, an aging expert has warned. | ||
So again there, I mean it's this is genocide. | ||
It's very deliberate They have instituted policies that have made it more and more difficult to have children the birthrate decreases Their solution to that is replacement migration as laid out in official UN documents which fulfill every Requirement to to be called genocide, | ||
so that's actually what's happening meanwhile British steel plant plans closure of plant after failing to agree to package with the UK government But this is a deeper story than you may Alright, | ||
welcome back folks. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host Harrison Smith. | ||
We'll go to an interview that we did yesterday with Sargon of Akkad, aka Carl Benjamin. | ||
I just always think of him as Sargon of Akkad. | ||
We didn't talk exclusively about the UK, but obviously that was a point of our conversation. | ||
But again, I just want to go through the suicidal nature of European policies. | ||
Not only are they Not having enough babies to replace themselves Not having enough children haven't had enough children for the last several decades to keep the pension system Functional and funded then they bring in migrants to both replace the native people who aren't having babies and to shore up the Pension program which of course doesn't happen because they all go on welfare and the problem only gets worse But they continue the operation anyway, | ||
Not only are they being actively slowly genocided by their own policies, they have now implemented two-tier policing in which white men will receive the full sentence, but everybody else will be given a pass, which is just retarded beyond description. | ||
But the story about British Steel really sort of encapsulates it all. | ||
Steel, the company, was sold to China in 2020. | ||
Now they're shutting down the largest and last two blast furnaces in the country so they can make steel in the UK. But it still would have been able to operate if it weren't for climate change initiatives. | ||
So when you talk about the varied components of this suicidal activity, not only are they selling off their industries to China... | ||
The company had sought support from the government for a major capital investment in two new electric arc furnaces, which would emit far less carbon into the atmosphere, but no agreement was reached after months of negotiation. | ||
The plan would require an additional 200 million pounds of government support to mitigate carbon costs in the interim period. | ||
So yeah, so they sold the company to China and then we're like, oh, by the way, you have to be carbon neutral. | ||
So the Chinese company is like, all right, well, we can do this for free in China and not have any environmental concerns. | ||
But if you want us to do that, then the government's got to pay. | ||
So then the taxpayers expected to foot hundreds of millions of dollars to prop up the now Chinese conglomerate owned British steel company. | ||
They can't afford it because of all the migrants that they brought in and are spending tens of billions of dollars on. | ||
So instead, UK will just no longer be able to produce its own steel out of a combination of both being sold to the Chinese and being shut down deliberately because of carbon change policies. | ||
Very similar to what's happening in Germany, where in Germany, a coal powered fire plant was blown up for three billion dollars and the demolition didn't even work well. | ||
In Hamburg, Germany, they tried to blow up the modern Moorburg coal powered coal fired power plant, the construction of which cost three billion euros and only finished a few years ago. | ||
However, the demolition did not go according to plan. | ||
The explosives worked only for one of the two boiler rooms. | ||
So that doesn't tell you how complete the collapse of Germany is. | ||
Not only are they blowing up steel coal power plants that they just finished in 2021, but they don't even have the capacity to do that correctly. | ||
Meanwhile, in France, they're imprisoning the most popular presidential candidate, Marine Le Pen. | ||
of a church for having a meeting. | ||
Just like people being arrested for praying silently in their homes. | ||
It's an attack on Christianity. | ||
But it wasn't just Quakers, you know, talking about conducting anti-war protests that were just arrested, six of them. | ||
Parents were arrested after making disparaging comments about a school in a WhatsApp chat. | ||
A mother and father said they were arrested in front of their young daughter and held in a cell for 11 hours after making disparaging comments about her school. | ||
So, Europe is a police state. | ||
And we're supposed to go to nuclear war over. | ||
All right. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is The American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Infowars.com, band.video. | ||
Joined in studio by Carl Benjamin. | ||
He's a British free speech activist who came to prominence through his YouTube pseudonym, Sargon of Akkad. | ||
He's the director of LotusEaters.com, where you can find his cultural and political comedy on YouTube. | ||
Again, that's Sargon of Akkad on X, Sargon underscore of underscore Akkad, and the website LotusEaters.com. | ||
Welcome to the show, sir. | ||
Thanks so much for having me. | ||
It's a pleasure to be here. | ||
It's my pleasure. | ||
I've been a big fan of yours for probably over a decade at this point. | ||
And we were just saying before the show, so many have sort of come and gone out of the YouTube commentary sphere. | ||
Some I forget even exist. | ||
But you've sort of ridden that wave and been able to remain culturally relevant, politically relevant. | ||
Where is your career now? | ||
What's the trajectory now? | ||
What are your goals or what are you working on? | ||
How is how has this evolved from Sargon and Vakad, the YouTube essays, to where you are now with lowdeceiters.com and everything? | ||
I was I was trying to figure out why the left was crazy, right? | ||
Because I used to be a liberal and I thought, oh well, surely this can be reformed from within, right? | ||
So if you just know enough about it, then you'll be able to explain to them why they're wrong. | ||
And in this kind of naive fashion, I decided to do a degree in philosophy and study it. | ||
And so I went back into the canon of the Western Enlightenment uh philosophy and everything that comes out of it and it turns out that no it's irredeemable uh it's crazy it wants the destruction of everything we have and the abolition of our nations as nations uh so they become purely materialistic economic zones in which we are isolated atomized individual consumers and workers and that's the end goal that they have in mind that's their ideal in state and not like you know horrific dystopian | ||
fiction uh and so i realized right okay there's there's literally no future uh in this um philosophy and so i started reading the alternatives and i ended up becoming very conservative because i think actually the right has a much more accurate read on what human nature actually is and what it is to create a good world that promotes human flourishing and uh you know the sort of things that we take for granted in the anglosphere are sort of you know liberty equality and law that sort of thing uh these are all of course key parts | ||
of it but The problem with the left and the Enlightenment more generally is that they abstract these things into hard ideological doctrines and then suggest they have to be applied universally and then try to reformat the entire civilization on that basis. | ||
So this means the liberation of children from their parents, the wives from their husbands, and people from being able to own things. | ||
Right. And to create this kind of sphere of perfect equality and liberty. | ||
Where of course we'd all own nothing and have nothing and be all alone all the time. | ||
And that sounds quite bad to me. | ||
And so I think actually a sort of richer view of what humanity is based on the intrinsic relationships that we have with one another is more sensible. | ||
and these things should be nurtured and actually this produces a better society because it's the one we used to have you know and we we can look back in the past and go wait things were obviously better back then we might have had less money we might have had less access to information maybe but people were definitely happier and the antidepressant sales prove it yeah absolutely and uh that's part of you know what the what the method is now of the left is to take the past and reimagine it the the classic image of you know the happy uh Family in the 50s and it's the dad cooking | ||
and the wife, you know, bringing him a beer and the left will go, well, the dad is secretly gay and the son is being molested by the priest and the grandpa is, you know, a mass murderer. | ||
And it's like, you have to imagine all this stuff because clearly what we're seeing is wholesome and good and lovely, but they have to destroy that in order to, you know, make the argument that Things were not all as they seem, so we don't want to go back there, but obviously it was better. | ||
And it's always to justify progress, right? | ||
Because progress, it's derisively called the Whig theory of history. | ||
The liberal view of history is a constant accumulation of success, and so society is forever going upwards, and if the present is actually not as good as the past, then that's not true, right? | ||
It's actually been declined. | ||
And actually we're losing things and they're taking things away from us in the things that they're doing. | ||
And this is why they are so malevolent towards, as you rightly put it, the sort of Norman Rockwell painting. | ||
Yeah. You know, the father having a barbecue with his kids in the back garden, the mum bringing out beer. | ||
Like, that's the ideal, right? | ||
That's the best thing we've ever managed as a human race. | ||
Yeah. That's the best time that we've ever managed to create. | ||
And it's gone now. | ||
It's going anyway, and they're trying to take it away. | ||
Yeah, and they have to demonize it or act like it wasn't as good as it as it was. | ||
And, you know, that's one of the things I think people don't realize, you know, we in America, we say, you know, they're trying to basically like undo the revolution. | ||
They're trying to like take us back to this world before America sort of created the modern democratic establishment, you know, back to this like feudalistic world. | ||
But in reality, they're trying to take us back like a thousand years, a thousand years of advancements of the Magna Carta of, you know, hard won liberties for the average person. | ||
They're trying to take us back to, I guess you could call it a neo-feudalism. | ||
But it's all of these things that through the Enlightenment, through the Great Awakening, like all these things. | ||
Can I stop you there, because it's actually worse than that. | ||
Oh no. | ||
I was trying to put it as bad as possible, but no, take me further. | ||
It's actually worse than that, because if you think about it, like, okay, so if you go back a thousand years and you're like a peasant in Russia or something, right? | ||
A peasant is someone who doesn't own property individually, they own property communally, right? | ||
So at least their family is tied to a piece of land, which is theirs, and they have to give 30% or whatever it is of their product to the local lord. | ||
But they still have way more than the average Zoomer has now, right? | ||
They still have a family, they have a wife, they have their children, they have a purpose, right? | ||
There's a reason that every day they get up, they go to their farm, they till their land, and then they go home, they drink their vodka or whatever, they spend time with their family. | ||
There's happiness to be found there, right? | ||
There's not liberty, that's fair, but there is happiness to be found there, right? | ||
That's way better than what the Zoomers have got. | ||
Like, I see a lot of young men these days who are just like, I can't get a girlfriend, I can't get a job, I can't get a house. | ||
I'm working essentially, you know, like a slave constantly for a corporation that will just won't even notice when it replaces me. | ||
Like, what the hell do I have? | ||
It's like, at least as a serf, you were important, right? | ||
You were a guy, you were a patriarch of a household, you know? | ||
You had responsibilities and you had people who looked up to you and you had all your basic needs met, you know? | ||
And I mean like the basic needs, not just for food, but just for relationships, for love. | ||
And this, what we're creating, is actually much more akin to the kind of state of nature that the liberals theorized that ancient man used to live in. | ||
So they logically assume that, well, since our societies aren't eternal, there must have been a point where they didn't exist, and so there must have been a point where men weren't in groups, where they were instead wandering individually in the wilderness, and for some reason they decided to form a group, consensually, right? | ||
They chose to come together into a society, and therefore The inequalities, the iniquities that societies create, well, they're all a product of us living in society. | ||
So if we can actually just reformat the world back into us living in the state of nature, we're not oppressed by one another, right? | ||
I'm not oppressed by a government. | ||
I'm not oppressed by an aristocratic class or, you know, the communists and the central government or something like this. | ||
And actually nature will just provide everything. | ||
I can wander around picking fruit off the trees and, you know, no man will ever have an evil word say against another, right? | ||
Now, That time never existed. | ||
Right. That's a total fantasy. | ||
But it's the fantasy that all of liberal philosophy is built on, right? | ||
Yeah. Because what it does is it harmonizes the concepts of liberty and equality. | ||
Because anyone with any kind of sense will say, well look, any amount of liberty destroys equality. | ||
Entirely. Any amount of equality destroys liberty entirely because people are different and they make different choices and those choices have different consequences and so you can have one or the other. | ||
But the liberals have created this magical thought experiment in which, no, liberty and equality can exist if nothing else exists. | ||
Right. If you aren't just a one atomized person wandering around the wilderness picking fruit off trees, yeah, you are free and you are equal to every other person doing exactly the same thing. | ||
And so this contradictory value set that's instantiated at the beginning of the sort of liberal mythology is now being used to destroy everything that we've got. | ||
So if the point being to liberate children from their parents, to liberate women from men, to liberate you from property, is just recreating the state of nature that they thought existed, but never existed. | ||
Right. And would be very very bad for your mental health were it to come about. | ||
And that's why Zoomers are like, oh, this has got to stop and we've got to get out of this. | ||
Yeah. And hopefully enough, Zoomers recognize that and are, you know, willing to try to break away. | ||
But, you know, obviously, if you if you're a fan of history, which I know you are, but I mean, this has been the argument since, like, you know, the this was a major part of the French Revolution. | ||
And there's this constant sort of promise of utopia that's always gets people to go along with it, never works out. | ||
You'd think people to learn their lesson eventually. | ||
And, you know, obviously the problem between the liberty and equality, it's we got this. | ||
There's this thing. | ||
There's this thing out there that stops liberals from achieving what they want to achieve, that causes all these problems. | ||
And it's this little annoyance of human will. | ||
There's this human will out there that people make their own decisions. | ||
They can't be predicted. | ||
Uh, you know, they're not machines. | ||
They can't be engineered to behave exactly as you want them to. | ||
And it seems like everything we experience with the globalist machinations, everything from COVID to the wars and, and absolutely everything folds into this idea that they're systematically trying to eliminate the exertion of free will. | ||
And I was blown away by your video about great men. | ||
It's called the return of great men, right? | ||
Um, it was maybe a couple of months ago that you put this out and it was just talking about It sort of for the first time truly illuminated for me like why the EU was freaking out in the way that it is with the rise of Donald Trump and JD Vance you know given that speech there. | ||
Can you talk a little bit about that about this about like why it is that when you have somebody like Donald Trump standing up and saying actually I'm for America first that is literally an existential crisis for the managers of the EU and that sort of upper class of elite. | ||
Yeah so the the European Union and the The Democrats, the Canadians, the West in general has been run along a system of highly developed bureaucracy and the things the bureaucracy likes are predictability and certainty to make sure that tomorrow is exactly the same as today because you've created a very complex system and you need to know that what happens at one end can move through the system and predictably produce the result that you're looking for at the other end every single time with absolute certainty | ||
and this you can imagine Does have its benefits right admit to have a a very well-structured food system for example This means you can guarantee this food that or electricity or whatever it is and so you can see why it would be very appealing To a certain kind of person a certain kind of person who themselves is not particularly self-confident not particularly Physically capable yeah, | ||
and often not terribly smart So people who are intelligent enough to understand how the system works But are not much more intelligent than being beyond the system. | ||
And so if you get those sorts of people who are like that, then they are allowed to congregate. | ||
They form a very, very effective bureaucracy. | ||
But that's actually bad for the sort of Alex Joneses of the world. | ||
The Mavericks. | ||
The Mavericks, right? | ||
Because you get other kinds of people who are less predictable, but not less effective. | ||
So Donald Trump is a great example of this and this this is what historian Thomas Carlyle called the great men of history and so he pointed out that well, it is true that there is always a kind of substrate of Circumstances in which the potential arises for someone who is individually competent and aggressive enough with what's happening to be able to Personally interact | ||
with the rest of the world and make things go in a certain direction. | ||
And we've got lots and lots and lots of examples of this, where like certain things, even though the events were kind of in play, there's no reason that they had to do this. | ||
I mean, Brexit's a good example of this, right? | ||
Nigel Farage, actually. | ||
Trump's victory is a good example of this. | ||
It wasn't inevitable by any stretch of the imagination. | ||
He had to use his will and determination to make that happen. | ||
And what this comes from is an area of the human soul that Plato called the thymus. | ||
So Plato had this theory of the tripartite soul. | ||
You've got the appetitive part, which is the part which does all the autonomous things that a human body does. | ||
You've got the logical part, the rational part, which is what the bureaucrat trades in. | ||
He needs to be able to rationalize systems and be able to intellectualize all of these things. | ||
But then you have the spirited part, which is the thymus, and that's the part of you that demands respect. | ||
That's the part of you that demands recognition. | ||
That's the part of you that won't allow people to treat you in ways that you think are inappropriate. | ||
And that's the part that the great man is using. | ||
In order to change history. | ||
That's the part that Donald Trump, and you can very much feel that Donald Trump represents the spirited part of America, but no, we're not having this. | ||
We're not taking this. | ||
We're going to, we're in fact going to use our champion to overthrow your entire order. | ||
We're not going to argue about it and try to get you to agree with us. | ||
We're just going to do it. | ||
Yeah. Just going to beat you. | ||
Yeah. And so Donald Trump is definitely one of these kinds of guys. | ||
Now these kinds of guys, you can see Donald Trump like, There's just no question that Donald Trump views his sort of magisterium as being the United States. | ||
Right. His constituency, the thing that he loves and cares about, it's obviously the United States. | ||
And so he is acting in the interests, as he perceives them, of the United States. | ||
Now, this is bad in two ways for the European Union and Canada and the rest of the bureaucratic world. | ||
Because not only are they thinking, right, okay, so we've got the return of history, as they call it. | ||
We've got the thymotic state in the United States that's not prepared to go along with the bureaucracy and just follow the rules-based order. | ||
So that's bad in and of itself. | ||
That's bad for the rules-based order. | ||
We had a system. | ||
But it's also controlled by someone who to them is unpredictable. | ||
Right. They're like, well, we don't know what he's going to do tomorrow. | ||
And that's actually one of Donald Trump's great strengths. | ||
It's also a weakness in some ways as well, because obviously some things need to be predictable. | ||
And the reason that they're convinced that Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin are best friends is because Putin is very much the same kind of man. | ||
He thinks he's standing up for the dignity of Russia and he thinks we're not going to take this from the United States and the encroachment of NATO anymore. | ||
We're going to make sure we're going to physically push back on this. | ||
Now that doesn't mean that they're friends or allies, right? | ||
Because of course they've got different areas of magisterium, right? | ||
Donald Trump is the United States, Vladimir Putin is Russian and America and Russia have conflicting interests and so they will be like medieval kings and they may like personally like each other I don't even know but they definitely have conflicting interests that they'll end up coming to blows over if they can't come to a peaceful accord but either way this is completely off the grid for the bureaucrats in the European Union. | ||
They were like, well, we had contracts, we had written agreements, we want committees to sit down and go through line by line of 10,000 pages of legal documents. | ||
We don't want, like, and you saw this brilliantly in Trump's first term when he was dealing with Kim Jong-un, right? | ||
It's like, oh, little rocky man? | ||
He might have a button on his desk, but I've got a bigger button on my desk, right? | ||
And what happened? | ||
He walked across the DMZ and shook hands with him. | ||
Right. Because this is all a part of human nature and basically it's how men deal with each other, right? | ||
Women will never understand why men solve their grievances by having a fistfight. | ||
Right. But afterwards they'll shake hands because they know the character of the man afterwards. | ||
You learn a lot about the man through the fight and this is the old style of doing things that we're seeing returned to and that's what's freaking out the European Union and the left at the moment, Democrats at the moment. | ||
They despise the great man because he is not predictable and not controllable. | ||
Yeah, and there's a level of system worship, isn't there, where the system is sort of everything, and everything has to be sacrificed in order to uphold the system, even if that's human nature, and they'll be willing to go along with the most brutal oppression as long as it's within the framework of that system. | ||
Thinking about like January 6th and that sort of thing, you know, for those of us sort of looking at it I think, objectively, you're seeing, you know, people who didn't think they did anything wrong, you know, high-five police on the way in, you know, we're like, oh, the Capitol's open, better walk in. | ||
Suddenly, they're having their door kicked in by the FBI and dragged away. | ||
We look at that with horror and go, oh my god, they're arresting these people as political prisoners. | ||
But to the people who sort of live in this world you're describing of just, like, the system is everything, they're like, they checked all the boxes, they went through the process, they, you know, they did, they filed the right paperwork, therefore, this can't be bad. | ||
And it's like, So there's this system warship where not only are they willing to keep the war with Ukraine going and kill another million people because that affirms the system that they're operating in, but they allow themselves to sit idly by while massive oppression is going on because they've been told the system is working, this is how the system is supposed to go. | ||
And that makes sense to people who are Not confident, as you point out, who are fearful. | ||
They need that certainty. | ||
Even if the system is brutal and oppressive, it's certain and it's permanent and it's infinite, so we never have to worry about anything else as long as we preserve the system. | ||
So there's this system worship of the rules-based order. | ||
That's completely correct. | ||
And this is what Vladimir Putin threatens with Ukraine. | ||
Ukraine is trying to join the European Union and the rules-based order and NATO and all of these things that will provide benefits in one way, But they will also provide negatives in the way that we obviously feel the negatives because it's hard to explain to people who haven't lived under the oppression of this kind of rules-based order and it's like it's not it's not soviet necessarily it's just the soviets operated in the same way right but the the liberal rules-based order it's not physically | ||
oppressive most of the time, what it is is spiritually oppressive. | ||
Right. And that takes a long time to manifest, right? | ||
That takes generations to manifest, because the people who move into it are often people who have come from an older paradigm, right? | ||
And so they've grown up and inherited the norms of this older paradigm. | ||
And so they just think, okay, well, I've benefited from not living under the rules-based order. | ||
and the way that the sort of more more three-dimensional human life that is created under that uh but we're seeing now is essentially a zoomer male revolt because the system deals with the appetitive side and the logical side very well it doesn't deal with the spirited side very well which is why a lot of women are very very left wing because they're not that spirited actually it's more of a male a masculine uh trait and I mean, Zuma men in America are just, they're more right-wing than their grandfathers. | ||
Yeah, right. | ||
Wow. And it is fantastic. | ||
Yes, I love it. | ||
It's fantastic. | ||
If there's hope, it lies with the Zuma men. | ||
Seriously, yeah. | ||
But yeah, so you can see why a country would want to join it, but the negatives of it are this slow drip feed of innovation to the civilization, where you see Europe and Canada now are just stagnant. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
We'll import millions of foreigners. | ||
So, okay, but A, they're still human. | ||
Whatever effect is happening to your people is going to happen to those people just over more time. | ||
You're just assuming they've got the non-liberal order inheritance that they're going to bring with them, but their children won't have that, and then their grandchildren won't have that, and then that'll die off, basically. | ||
Right, and then they'll die off, and then they'll be replaced with another group of people, yeah. | ||
But then, why would someone else come, right? | ||
Because Like, it's already now, you'll see TikToks of like, you know, people from Uganda or whatever going like, oh don't come to the UK, it's terrible here, it's terrible, look how much it's been ruined. | ||
It's like, who ruined it? | ||
Right, right. | ||
But there's going to come a point where the foreigners just don't come because they're like, no, that's a dying place. | ||
Yeah. That's a black hole for bloodlines. | ||
Like, why would I want to go there? | ||
Yeah. This isn't where like, flourishing takes place. | ||
Yeah, and it is honestly so sad. | ||
It's just sad what's happening to Europe right now, because they really are just dying out and committing suicide in as many ways as they possibly can. | ||
The other, you know, frustrating thing about the rules-based order, so-called, and I want to do the, you know, quotes every time I say that, because it's arbitrary when it's enforced and when it's not, right? | ||
The rules-based order is the same as they do with democracy, right? | ||
Democracy, this is all for democracy. | ||
But if democracy decides against the rules-based order, then you'll have to try again. | ||
Well, you know, sure, you voted for Brexit, but let's talk about it for five years first. | ||
Or, you know, Ukraine, we're fighting for democracy. | ||
Well, we had to cancel elections because of the war. | ||
We're not really democratic at all. | ||
So it's, it's entirely... | ||
Romania, they just cancelled a series of elections. | ||
It's like, sorry, right. | ||
So the term democracy is not the same as democracy. | ||
Right. Because their use of the word democracy means the out the correct outcome for the rules based order. | ||
Exactly. Whenever they use democracy, they're not talking about your ability to vote. | ||
Right. Let me let me come back to the January 6th thing, because I always found this absolutely fascinating. | ||
There was there was some violence in January 6th. | ||
That's true. | ||
But like there was also a lot of consensual invasions. | ||
Invasion? Yeah. | ||
You know, the powers that be let them in, the people obviously were very polite as they walked between the velvet ropes. | ||
They caused a bit of havoc in there, don't get me wrong. | ||
And I, you know, I don't want to say that nothing untoward happened or anything like that, but the way that the Democrats blew it up was not in the actual fact of what had happened. | ||
You see, you saw people like, you know, AOC and Pelosi and Chuck Schumer saying things like, Our sacred democracy, our sacred capital, right? | ||
But if you go back to the liberal ideology that founded the United States, so the United States is like the ultimate classical liberal project, right? | ||
It's a consciously constitutional order that was born out of what became to be known as liberalism, right? | ||
So liberalism wasn't a term that was used when the United States was founded, but it's the conscious understanding, no, we're going to create this, so we enunciate a series of negative freedoms that people will be able to live essentially indefinitely under and we'll call this liberty and that's a that's a good term for this uh and it's a good project frankly it's a good idea um but what that means is that this is a consensual man-made construct right there's nothing sacred about your character right that that's that's heretical | ||
To what it is to be an American, say, oh the government, oh that's sacred, you know? | ||
No, that's the people's building, we built it because we wanted it, and if we don't want it, we can take it down at any time we want, right? | ||
I mean, if you go back a hundred years, like, there were no guards at the White House, like, there's um, there's a Japanese account of a tourist who came here in like the late 19th century, and he's like, people can just wander in. | ||
Yeah, up until World War II. | ||
Yeah, this, this is bizarre, because of course he comes from Imperial Japan, where it's like the emperor is a sacred figure, right? | ||
Right, right. | ||
And, and so, just mind-blowing to these people. | ||
But that's what you have when you have a constitutional, consciously self-constructed thing. | ||
It's not sacred. | ||
It doesn't have magical properties. | ||
And it's crazy that the Democrats would just reveal themselves so quickly that, oh no, our sacred capitalists are like, oh, you're not an American. | ||
Right, right. | ||
Not an American. | ||
You're missing some essential component. | ||
Yeah, yeah, absolutely. | ||
You don't believe in the American founding myth. | ||
What you believe is some sort of magical Myth where God comes down and ordains the capital. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, yeah. | |
No, no, your capital is completely man-made. | ||
There's nothing magical about it. | ||
Yeah. And that's the good thing about it. | ||
Right, right. | ||
And that's how it was supposed to be. | ||
And that's what, you know, when I was watching January 6, it was like, yes, this is what's supposed to be happening. | ||
I was all for it. | ||
But of course, they're able to, you know, spin these narratives and convince everybody that, yeah, it was the equivalent of like, well, I'd say, you know, sacking a church, but You know, we see churches burn and they don't even get reported on the news anymore, so everything is topsy-turvy. | ||
But, you know, we talk about liberty itself as a concept, and as you're pointing out, this idea of, you know, consciously joining into a collective agreement, sort of, that we're all going to uphold these certain negative freedoms, or, you know, and this is born from things like, you know, the freedom of the City of London, that was You know, we are protected by our charter, not by a lord. | ||
We're not a subject of a lord. | ||
That's not where, you know, the protection of our liberties comes from. | ||
It comes from this collective that we've established to uphold each other's freedoms and liberties in the same way that, like, when an ancient Roman, he wasn't, you know, the liberty of Rome meant that he was protected by the state of Rome. | ||
There was this idea of we're forming a state, we're forming a collective of people With the purpose of upholding certain rights or protecting our people and their freedoms against outside forces. | ||
And that sort of, I think, has gone away. | ||
The very understanding of what liberty is supposed to be. | ||
Just going back to the image of, like, wandering around in the forest, you know, picking fruit. | ||
It's like, yeah, you're free, but, like, that's not the freedom I want. | ||
I want civilization and freedom, which to me is liberty. | ||
What the globalists are doing now is establishing civilization as being an end in and of itself, and liberty can just get in the way of that, which to me, why have a civilization if it's not founded for the purpose of upholding the freedom of the individuals within it? | ||
Does that make any sense? | ||
It makes perfect sense. | ||
I mean, like, the reason that classical liberalism worked in America is because it was just negative, right? | ||
The government cannot do this. | ||
The government cannot do this because the Because it was assumed in the sort of Lockean mould that everyone is imbued with certain natural rights, right? | ||
A natural right to associate, a natural right to speak, the natural right to labour. | ||
If you can mix your labour with anything in nature, then it's yours, because you made it something personal to yourself. | ||
This all makes complete sense. | ||
This is a completely coherent doctrine that everyone can basically go, yeah, that does make sense. | ||
If that guy worked on this thing that was just laying on the ground, then it's his. | ||
It's not mine because I didn't work on it. | ||
So if I can go pick up my own thing from the ground and work on it. | ||
So if I cut down a tree or something and make a log cabin, that's my log cabin, not your log cabin. | ||
Because I did it and you've got no claim to it. | ||
It makes perfect sense. | ||
The government shouldn't tell me what I can and can't say because it's my tongue. | ||
I'm the one using it, right? | ||
The government shouldn't tell me where I can and can't go, within reason. | ||
Because obviously, blah, blah, blah. | ||
But like, it's a completely sensible It's not The radical reformatting of an English-speaking country. | ||
Right. Because the English already lived by that kind of doctrine. | ||
This is just like the formal enunciation of it. | ||
Exactly. But into a constitution. | ||
So what you're doing is you're telling the people what they already believe. | ||
Right. And saying, look, we're just going to live by the rules we already agree to. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, yeah. | |
Well, that doesn't require a revolution, actually. | ||
You know, what that requires is just a political break from any order that disagrees with that, which is, of course, the British Empire. | ||
But then when you take that kind of doctrine to somewhere like France, where they don't live like that, they don't believe these things, and they don't have the social institutions and norms that would agree with this, well you do have to have a social revolution where you reform an entire society. | ||
Now, when you've got a different kind of society that you apply this to, you can find that a purely negative doctrine doesn't actually encompass everything that these people are going to ask for. | ||
Because when you are in a feudal society, Well, there are positive rights. | ||
You have an affirmative right to something that someone is obliged to give you through a series of patronage and, frankly, class oppressions, right? | ||
So if you introduce these things and say, introduce purely negative doctrine and say, look, we're going to take away all of these things and then you're basically on your own. | ||
Well, there's going to be a large segment of society that doesn't really agree with that. | ||
Right. Because that's just not the way they live their lives. | ||
That's not what they're used to. | ||
That's not what they expect. | ||
That's not what they think is moral. | ||
And so they'll say, well no, we need a positive right. | ||
We need a positive right to something. | ||
So I need a positive right to food, to housing, to this, to that, the other. | ||
None of which is of course guaranteed by American negative liberalism, but that's why it works because it means you personally have to do the work. | ||
Well now you've got an system of entitlements and this positive system of entitlements is Not only coming back from Europe to America, but it's basically everywhere. | ||
It's instantiated in various charters of human rights. | ||
They begin in the negative, but if you read through them, they start arriving at like, we've got a right to a family life. | ||
It's like, but what if you don't have a family? | ||
What now? | ||
Are my rights being violated? | ||
You've got a right to a house. | ||
It's like, but what if I don't have a job? | ||
Who's got the obligation to build my house, right? | ||
And so the sort of like, There's a kind of lazy characterization in America. | ||
It's like, well, that's slavery. | ||
Not entirely, but kind of. | ||
Yeah. Someone's got to do it. | ||
Someone's got to be responsible for the creation of my right to something that didn't otherwise exist. | ||
Right. And so it's not entirely unfair to say there is an aspect of slavery to this. | ||
And so suddenly paying taxes in the negative system, which seems very reasonable because Why would you need a massive government in a negative system, right? | ||
It's just, well, we're going to get an army, we're going to get the state bureaucracy to make sure the army can function, blah, blah, blah, you know, for whatever permits we actually do need, because there are reasonable uses of a government. | ||
But you can see why that would be minimal. | ||
And you can see if you look at like the, the graph of American tax over time, virtually nothing. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
Whereas now, because you've got all these positive entitlements that have been created. | ||
Yeah, and it's and, you know, it'd be one thing if the government did everything it was obligated to do and then had some positive rights on top of it. | ||
But then you look around, especially, you know, under Biden and stuff, it's like, OK, if you were to boil down the role of government and just just get rid of all the extemporaneous stuff, just get down to the core root. | ||
It's like to protect the people in the country from outside the country. | ||
And they're not even doing that. | ||
So they're not even fulfilling the most basic, you know, foundational obligation of the government. | ||
But it has all of these, you know, positive rights and gifts they're giving to people. | ||
So it's like. | ||
They've completely shattered the agreement that we were supposed to have. | ||
Because again, it's like, okay, I could understand like, all right, our borders, our border is secure, you know, national security is, is established, and we're not in any threat. | ||
And, and most people are doing, okay, yeah, maybe we can add some, you know, maybe we can bring in some asylum seekers, maybe we can have some government funded healthcare on top of everything else. | ||
But it's like, they can't even fulfill the most basic functions, because almost they're obsessed with all this other stuff that isn't actually, you know, pertinent to the to the operation of government at all. | ||
And moreover, if you're bringing in, in Biden's case, millions of foreigners, and you've got a system of entitlements, who bears the burden of those entitlements? | ||
It's not the people who have contributed absolutely nothing to the country and probably won't contribute all that much in the near future. | ||
It's the regular American taxpayer who's now getting exploited. | ||
And the same thing's happening in my country and everywhere else. | ||
It's completely unfair. | ||
And like you say, the social contract here is breaking down. | ||
This is not what we agreed to. | ||
Because, I mean, if you just had negative entitlements, you know, nothing, you know, you just had the rights, then you would get a certain percentage of other countries wanting to move here, as historically America always had, who were like, you know, I want freedom because I'm going to build a business. | ||
Right. I'm going to earn some money. | ||
And if I don't, I'm going to starve to death and die, but I'm just going to go do it. | ||
So you get a natural self-selection. | ||
Exactly. Productive people. | ||
Yeah. Well, you're not getting that now. | ||
You see, you know, someone's grandmother or something or he is a very overweight, you know, Spanish woman or the Mexican woman Sorry, you know, they're clearly coming here for benefits and entitlements. | ||
Yeah, and well, this isn't gonna hold right and it's and it's not good for them It's not good for us. | ||
Like obviously, you know, you've got if you've got mass amounts of people fleeing these countries I mean, they're they're gonna have brain drain to a massive degree as well. | ||
And I mean Obviously America's is We're not doing great. | ||
Now we've got Trump where we're starting to right the ship, but I compare ourselves to Europe and man, we are doing awesome. | ||
What is going on in Europe, man? | ||
I mean, France, Germany, UK. | ||
I mean, well, all of them. | ||
I mean, every single one, you know, the number one baby name is Mohammed across the board, Netherlands, Spain, all of them, Portugal. | ||
I mean, every major city, every capital city doesn't look like, you know, it's, uh, It's Paris or Frankfurt or anywhere, European anymore. | ||
I mean, what's going to happen? | ||
Because right now you still have the numbers of native-born people that you could do something, but you're completely hamstrung by the regulations and arbitrary speech laws and all these sorts of things. | ||
So the situation is only going to get worse and worse if it's not turned around. | ||
So what is the trajectory for Europe into the future? | ||
Is there a hopeful trajectory? | ||
In the offing? | ||
More skewed and negative perception of Europe than really exists, right? | ||
So, you are right about the cities, but most Europeans don't live in the cities, actually. | ||
Most Europeans live in the country. | ||
Because Europe, in England especially, is like a giant garden, really. | ||
We've been there for thousands of years. | ||
We've made the landscape very normal. | ||
Americans have a very different relationship to their continent than the Europeans do. | ||
Yeah, for sure. | ||
Like, you can see this in your folklore, right? | ||
American folklore's terrifying. | ||
Like, oh my god, what, skinwalkers? | ||
And, like, Bigfoot says, oh my god, they're gonna kill me. | ||
In Europe, we've got, oh, little fairies. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | |
You know, we've got, you know, elves. | ||
Gnomes. Yeah, exactly, right. | ||
Europe's a much friendlier place to the people, because we've been there for such a long time, right? | ||
Right. And so we tend to, you know, live in villages in the country somewhere. | ||
This is a lot more rare here. | ||
You guys seem to conglomerate in massive cities, which, you know, as a European, I don't live in a massive city, and I'm like, Christ, you know, I don't... | ||
I don't know why you'd want to live like this, but that's fine. | ||
You know, it's the way you do things, right? | ||
So, the cities have become diversified, but then they're not by any stretch of the imagination the majority of the population. | ||
So, for example, England is still three quarters English, right? | ||
And we, like, the Muslim population of England is 6.5%. | ||
Right, you wouldn't know that from the headlines going out, yeah. | ||
Because they congregate in colonies, right? | ||
So they, in particular areas, there are very a concentrated number of Muslims but they just aren't anywhere else right and so it's easy to get a screenshot of a video of a street that's full of Muslims you go oh my god look at this because yeah every Muslim in England basically or in like four or five places you know that the English don't live but you can go to any any village in the country and it's still an old-fashioned English village I live in the southwest and it's still 90% English and the only place that's been diversified is | ||
One city that's on the train line. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. Right. | |
So that's the only sort of diversified place. | ||
So it's, it's not that bad. | ||
It just looks that bad because of the concentrations, but the problem isn't actually the demographics so far, although they are obviously a massive problem, um, because we've got lots of social entitlements. | ||
So millions of new people, well, that's making us poor and it is immigration basically alone that is making us completely impoverished even with the tax burden we have to pay. | ||
The problem though is our governments who have decided that it's their job to protect these minorities from negative characterizations by the majority. | ||
Right. So you're not allowed to have a negative opinion about this group of people or that group of people or the other group of people. | ||
It doesn't matter how many rape gangs come out of this one group of people and how widely known and used because these rape gangs, they're essentially child prostitution rings. | ||
Right. So they will traffic these girls around uh to other communities of the same like and sell these girls as prostitutes right and so each of these girls like look i've had sex with hundreds of men hundreds and i don't know who they are and so when the gang is finally stopped like a dozen men are arrested okay so now we we know there are just thousands of child rapists in these communities just wandering at large right they'll never be brought to justice um But | ||
if you negatively characterize the community because of this, the government will say, no, that's racism. | ||
That's absolutely unacceptable. | ||
Right. You are going to jail for that. | ||
That's the thing that they are essentially geared towards preventing. | ||
And so all of our laws, all of our sort of anti-discrimination laws, are designed to prevent this kind of negative characterization. | ||
And I'm sure you've all seen recently that the court advisory body, Uh that we have so it's kind of governmental body it's not legislative so it doesn't have direct executive power of the courts but it's highly influential because it gives like the kind of what the system wants the courts to do right kind of tells the courts look this is what the system best practices sort of yeah yeah yeah that's a good way of looking at it and it said well look for women minorities uh well | ||
foreign minorities uh sexual minorities disabled people they commit a crime give them a lower sentence than you otherwise would have done because they've got mitigating factors uh because being a woman or being an immigrant is equivalent to being disabled apparently in british right right um but straight white men nothing so we get the worst possible punishment so we have actually uh and this comes in on tuesday uh two tier is genuinely a two-tier society and the straight white men are at the bottom of it yeah it's that's | ||
one of the things it's like i mean you know that stuff Goes on sort of in an unspoken way like even here in America where you know It's just that that that culture has pervaded so much that you know Without saying as much it's like yeah The white guy is gonna get you know a harsher sense than the black guy and we saw it You know with the prosecutor of Daniel Penny like I you know killed the guy on the subway by accident totally totally unfairly treated total like Penny's a hero. | ||
He's totally he's a total hero. | ||
They the way they tricked him. | ||
He didn't realize he killed the guys They're questioning him As if he's a hero so he's just anyway that holds but the prosecutor in that you know sort of went viral she has a video where she's you know some black guy went up and knocked out a there's an old asian man 80 year old asian man who just got money out of an ATM black guy rolls up rocks him in the head the guy dies and the prosecutor's there going yeah but I learned about his story and I realized he had no choice but to rob this guy and it's like okay so that's already bad enough it's already just like horrifying to hear that out | ||
of a prosecutor's mouth But then to see it actually codified like in you know mainstream media going yeah you know from now on white men are going to be punished more harshly than anybody else it's like that's just such a next level of insanity. | ||
I don't even know how to like deal with it. | ||
But it is kind of inevitable because remember what they're aiming for is equality. | ||
Right. And one thing that you don't get if you have just a completely free system is equality. | ||
Right. People are different. | ||
Groups of people in aggregate become different to other groups of people. | ||
So if you've got one group of people who's less prone to committing crimes and more prone to following the rules and forming stable families and making sure that the children that they raise are good law-abiding taxpaying citizens, well actually they end up with more. | ||
They end up accumulating more. | ||
They have an unfair advantage of having a family that cares about them. | ||
They definitely characterize it as an unfair advantage because of course if you have a group of people who don't form stable families and tend more towards criminality, well they are more in trouble with the law, they're more in jail, they're recidivists, so they end up getting longer sentences, and that's oppression by society. | ||
You can see how the sort of left-wing positive rights view has arrived and been like, well hang on a second, the liberty part, okay fine, but look at the equality part, look how damaged that is. | ||
It's like, I don't want equality, I want justice. | ||
Justice is not giving the guy who murders the 80 year old man because he wanted his money, an easy time in prison and we got the same thing in our prisons like I mean Keir Starmer is letting out actual murderers after only a few months in jail and it's like we used to hang murderers you know yeah like we used to hang them and we said we used to it used to be that if if like you know four guys were in the middle of a job or something and one guy shoots someone all four would be hanged really yeah absolutely you know absolutely and that's the way it ought to be you know no you were you committing a crime and | ||
someone died you're all guilty right but you're all culpable for this And now we don't punish them at all, basically. | ||
Yeah, nuts. | ||
Yeah, it's crazy. | ||
But it can't go on forever. | ||
Unfortunately, Nigel Farage isn't going to be the guy to fix it. | ||
Well, that's what I was going to ask. | ||
We have less than five minutes left, so I don't know if we can even get into even the shallower aspects of that conflict. | ||
But I mean, is there a path for the UK electorally, politically? | ||
Yeah, obviously there's always a lot of hope with Nigel Farage, but then it always seems to be undercut one way or another. | ||
I mean, what's the latest now? | ||
Is what's happening now with the Reform Party? | ||
I mean, that maybe is a no-go. | ||
I mean, in two minutes or less, what is the state of British politics? | ||
Okay, so Britain is basically a right-wing country, right? | ||
The majority of British people are actually quite conservative in many ways, and they definitely want things to change. | ||
Most people are against immigration. | ||
Like, even like our wet parties want illegal immigrants deported. | ||
Right. Like, even more of our wet voters are more right-wing than the Democrats, right? | ||
It's just that they don't get any representation. | ||
For some reason, Nigel Farage has decided, I'm instead going to, instead of leaning into this actually right-wing voter base that is the majority of the country, he's decided to go to the centre and be as weak as possible. | ||
So Elon Musk called it when he said, look, Nigel isn't the guy. | ||
He's not prepared to go to war with the establishment. | ||
Right. Donald Trump went to war with the establishment, and that's why he won. | ||
Because he just said, no, look, we're going to do all of these things, and we don't care what they're going to say about us. | ||
And Najaf Raj does care about what they say about him, and he doesn't want to be a radical. | ||
He doesn't want to overthrow the system. | ||
He just wants to make the system less oppressive as it does what it does. | ||
And it's like, that's not good enough, man. | ||
Yeah. You know, this system has to go. | ||
You'll need an Irish Conor McGregor, English Conor McGregor. | ||
He's not going to get anywhere, I'm afraid. | ||
I know, but he's at least got the fighting spirit. | ||
He does, but the presidency of Ireland is the wrong thing. | ||
Conor, what you've got to do is start a political party and start taking over by winning elections. | ||
That's the only way to do it, man. | ||
Yeah, well, and, you know, I would like to see more activism or, you know, political action from people like yourself, people who actually understand it. | ||
It seems like I mean, it seems like y'all, especially through Lotus Eaters and everything y'all have been doing, I see you guys crop up on what I think is mainstream media over in the UK. | ||
So, I mean, do you think the winds of change are blowing in a favorable direction for y'all? | ||
We've been working very hard. | ||
Lotus Eaters has been a very successful project. | ||
We are influential in Britain, thankfully. | ||
Uh, and we are helping to patch, it's not just us, but we're helping to patch together a network of right-wing thinkers and influencers and politicians who are smart, capable and understand the problem and what needs to be done to be able to fix it, which is just war with the establishment. | ||
We just have to present a paradigm shift away from it and then people can vote for it. | ||
Unfortunately, Nigel Farage is on the other side of that, which is a real shame. | ||
He could have been part of it, but he's, he's not really a leader. | ||
It's such a bummer though, because there's so much potential there, obviously. | ||
But, you know, obviously the establishment of Europe is flipping out and it seems like their solution is just to start a war with Russia and send all the radicalized young men to die in some godforsaken field in Ukraine. | ||
So, I don't think that's going to go anywhere, do you? | ||
No, I don't think. | ||
Why would you fight for... | ||
The rules-based order that has literally made you a second-class citizen. | ||
Right. You can bring in your new mercenaries that you've brought across from overseas. | ||
Send them to fight. | ||
Yeah. And they're not going to, obviously. | ||
So I don't think a war with Ukraine is going to go anywhere. | ||
A war in Ukraine is going to go anywhere. | ||
Yeah, I don't think so either, but they're definitely trying. | ||
Man, we could go on and on. | ||
This has been so good. | ||
At Sargon of Akkad on X, at Sargon underscore of underscore Akkad website, lotuseaters.com. | ||
Carl Benjamin, thank you so much for joining us. | ||
Fantastic stuff, man. | ||
It's been great to talk to you. | ||
My pleasure. | ||
Alright folks, that's going to do it for us. | ||
Stay tuned. | ||
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