Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
The scumbags that prey on America's children are multiplying. | ||
They are so brazen that they hunt them on social media. | ||
unidentified
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Danny, can you come and get me Danny? | |
On the video chat! | ||
Help me, Danny! | ||
Danny, will you come help him? | ||
Sometimes they're even the developers of those platforms. | ||
unidentified
|
So, when he told you he was 13, what was you thinking? | |
I didn't know exactly. | ||
I thought... | ||
Maybe it was someone in trouble. | ||
If they were reaching out, someone thought they knew me. | ||
Okay, because you not once in this whole conversation expressed or he expressed that he was in any kind of trouble. | ||
So he never told you that he was in any kind of trouble. | ||
So, um, he said, better watch my language with you. | ||
And he said, why? | ||
Because you're a youngin, you said. | ||
A Vancouver teacher has been implicated in a child pornography ring. | ||
Police in Australia have announced the arrest of 11 people. | ||
Two are Canadians. | ||
As Teresa Lalonde reports, the ring allegedly operated through Facebook. | ||
If we can stop it at that initial point, then we can lessen the impact on the child and hopefully, you know, lessen the distribution of their images and videos of them being tortured. | ||
Facebook would deactivate the suspect's site, but not contact police. | ||
The suspects would simply set up a new account in a different name. | ||
They are their teachers. | ||
They are in top positions in law enforcement. | ||
unidentified
|
These two individuals, a deputy in Livingston Parish and his teacher wife, who was a middle school teacher, got caught by Adobe. | |
They were photoshopping things. | ||
Adobe turned them into authorities in Louisiana, which launched an investigation. | ||
Authorities with the attorney general's office showed up at the couple's house. | ||
They found this safe full of hard drives, computers, thumb drives, things like that. | ||
And all of it was encrypted with a software called Keep My Data Safe. | ||
And so essentially they had to come in and decode everything. | ||
And when they decoded everything, they were alarmed at what they saw. | ||
They saw child porn. | ||
They saw child rape. | ||
They also saw what appeared to be this deputy who was ejaculating on sweets that were then being served to... | ||
His wife's class. | ||
They are in the tax-fueled bureaucracy that runs our lives. | ||
unidentified
|
The Defense Department releasing brand new details into an investigation involving child pornography and dozens of its workers and contractors, some with top-level security clearance. | |
Not only are these very serious accusations, but investigators say some of the people involved were handling the nation's most sensitive secrets. | ||
Take a look at this, for instance. | ||
The National Security Agency, the National Reconnaissance Office, and the very secretive Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. | ||
Others also worked on actual military Department of Defense computers are being misused to share, to spread, to access child pornography. | ||
The Department of Defense does not have an adequate way of responding to this, of tracking down and investigating who is an individual, Parents are knowingly selling videos and photos of their children to predators. | ||
This is exactly what is happening on these platforms that are allowing adults to subscribe to exclusive content of minors. | ||
This is a 13, maybe 14 year old girl behind me who has a variety of tiers to see photos We're back covering the shocking allegations against Lawrence Ray, | ||
a 60-year-old dad accused of starting a sex cult with his daughter's college classmates after getting out of prison. | ||
And to give you an idea, Doc, of the spectrum of people that he was around, he called me up from an airplane one time. | ||
unidentified
|
And he said, pick me up at JFK. | |
I'm coming into JFK. | ||
I've got some friends. | ||
And as he got off the plane and he was walking toward my car, I'm looking out the window. | ||
And I said, wow. | ||
I said, this guy that he's walking with, he really looks like President Mikhail Gorbachev of the Soviet Union. | ||
Gosh. And, uh, he puts Mikhail Gorbachev in the backseat of my car. | ||
This is the hill to die on. | ||
The charade has gone on long enough. | ||
They can't have our children. | ||
John Bowne reporting. | ||
unidentified
|
John Bowne reporting. | |
It's Friday, April 4th, 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 in the stuff together. | ||
Okay, three, two, one, let's jam. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to The American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Joined in studio and right off the bat by my guest, Myron Gaines. | ||
He's the host of the Fresh and Fit podcast, as well as Debrief. | ||
He's a best-selling author, a real estate investor. | ||
Prior to entrepreneurship, Gaines was a special agent with the Homeland Security Investigations in Laredo, Texas, Miami, Florida field offices. | ||
A lot of experience in a lot of different realms. | ||
You can find Fresh and Fit on YouTube at FreshFitMiami. | ||
Myron is on X at MyronGainesX and of course on Rumble and YouTube, MyronGainesX. | ||
Myron, welcome to the show. | ||
Thanks for having me on, man. | ||
I'm happy to be here. | ||
My pleasure. | ||
Thanks for coming here so early. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
I think you might be the first guest we've ever had on in the first hour. | ||
So thank you for making the sacrifice. | ||
Absolutely, man. | ||
It's an honor and I'm happy to be here, man. | ||
You know, I went to bed early last night, so it worked out well. | ||
Nice, nice, yeah. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I've only been doing the show for five years. | ||
I'm still not used to waking up this early. | ||
But one day, one day my brain will reorganize. | ||
Well, tell us about Fresh and Fit because if, well, if our viewers have been on Axe in the last few years, you've probably seen clips of it. | ||
It's incredibly popular. | ||
Because of the drama it creates. | ||
Just tell us about the podcast and like how it works and how you guys do it. | ||
Yeah, sure. | ||
So we have two different shows. | ||
We have the regular FreshFit where on Mondays we talk about like making money, money Mondays, real estate investing, cryptocurrency, you know, index funds, whatever it may be. | ||
We had a Grand Cardona on last week. | ||
Talking real estate, commercial real estate. | ||
On Wednesdays, we call it Womanizer Wednesdays, where we talk about dating and relationships and becoming more attractive, how to deal with women. | ||
And then on Fridays, it's like a call-in show, or we have a special guest on the show. | ||
And then what people know us for are what's called after hours. | ||
So we do the daytime show at 8 p.m., and then we do the nighttime show with the girls at 11 p.m. | ||
And then I do the debrief at 5. So I do debrief at 5, pressure fit at 8, and then at 11 p.m., we do the girls for after hours. | ||
And that's where the crazy Shaniqua's come in and go crazy. | ||
I was going to ask, what do you think it is that brings Fresh and Fit Podcast so much attention, so much success? | ||
You know there are 10 million people trying to do what you do. | ||
Why are you guys successful and so many aren't? | ||
Well, I think it's a multitude of different things. | ||
I'm a bit more fiery than Michael who's fresh. | ||
He's a bit more palatable and nice to the girls. | ||
That helps quite a bit the good cop bad. | ||
Yeah, good cop bad cop routine You know my experience from what I used to do for work before like when I'm there listening to the girls I listen very closely to everything that they say and you know I write things down as well, and what you come to find is like modern women are just really Contradictory men like they say things, but their behaviors almost never match that what they say, and I think that's female nature in general You know what do you want to refer to biblical text of Quran or you know? | ||
The Torah, you know, we've been talking about women for centuries and literally thousands of years So it's like so yeah, they're doing the same they're doing the same stuff in biblical times that they're doing now and basically they're inconsistent That's that's hilarious. | ||
Yeah, and so that you know, there's all these divisions right there's race there's Gender there's religion. | ||
There's all these things and this is where the drama comes in. | ||
I guess I mean, do you think there's Do you think we'll eventually get over the differences and like this will stop being interesting or are we just are we stuck in these dichotomies forever and it's just about like figuring out how to work within them? | ||
Yeah man I mean for guys it's bad because for a lot of men like they struggle with this man like for like the younger guys like me and you are a little bit older like we're millennials but like these younger guys that were born in like you know the 2000s late 90s whatever they're really struggling with women man like because the problem is that social media has kind of come in We're good | ||
to go. | ||
Good with kids, has a dog, like they want the perfect guy. | ||
I'm taken, sorry ladies. | ||
Yeah, like dude, you're good. | ||
It's good that you're off the market because I feel sorry for a lot of guys, man. | ||
It's terrible. | ||
No, I do too. | ||
I feel really sorry for a lot of guys because yeah, it's not set up. | ||
But I feel sorry for the girls too because I think they're in, you know, the social media world might be catering to them, but it's certainly not helping them. | ||
And, you know, there's this movie out in In the UK right now, adolescents and we, you know, they race swapped in there. | ||
There's all blame everything on Andrew, right? | ||
It's crazy. | ||
Yeah, they're blaming everything on Andrew Tate. | ||
And there, you know, it's, I mean, we could go on and on about it. | ||
But essentially, they're saying this, this movie, it's hilarious, because they're like writing laws on this piece of propaganda, right? | ||
It's just clearly a piece of state produced propaganda. | ||
But they're sitting there watching it going, this is so moving. | ||
We need laws to address this. | ||
And it's all about the social media effect on boys, and they're saying, oh, it's dangerous to have, you know, these male influencers influencing boys. | ||
But if you look at the stats, it's girls who have been radicalized through social media. | ||
It's girls that are massive. | ||
I mean, boys are a little bit more conservative on the Zoomer level, but girls are massively more liberal. | ||
You know, there's a lot of talk and concern about the influence of social media on boys, but it's girls that are actually being changed the most. | ||
And I would argue the social media on the boy side benefits them because it makes them embrace their masculinity. | ||
Like, we look at Trump, for example, right? | ||
Trump was one of the first candidates on the Republican Party to get the younger vote. | ||
Why is that? | ||
Because TikTok, guys like Andrew Tate, guys like myself, guys like Sneako, guys like Nick Fuentes, a lot of these guys influence younger men to be like, you know what? | ||
I'm going to be a bit more conservative because our demographic, you know, We grew up, oh, Obama's cool, like, yeah, liberal, like, yeah, woo. | ||
Like, you got idiots like Hassan Piker that never grew up. | ||
They're still, like, left-wing, right? | ||
We woke up and were like, whoa, this party doesn't serve us. | ||
And progressives, and that's kind of what happened, where the Democrat Party and progressives in general, they ostracized men. | ||
And the young guys kind of said, you know what? | ||
They are ostracizing us. | ||
We're going to go and embrace conservatism because at least here we can be men and do what we're supposed to do. | ||
And I think, like, TikTok and etc before they really started clamping down on guys like me and Andrew and everybody else Really help with like getting young men like to embrace their masculinity, so I think if anything social media Helps guys more than women because with women they become delusional man. | ||
They really end up thinking like I'm a princess I'm the baddest chick ever and and it just really hurts race relations, or it's the opposite right or you have Average girls out without social media Would have a boyfriend and you know all this stuff and instead they're you know they feel worthless because you know they don't have the social media presence that you know of the more attractive popular girl does or whatever so you know it's and they compare their life to other women so like that's the other thing like oh well she has this boyfriend who like does XYZ for her like I want that too so | ||
that's nothing to with like women's like they compare their life to other girls On social media and they're like far more, you know, they fall for that. | ||
Unreasonable expectations. | ||
For sure. | ||
Put up on it. | ||
And yeah, and you know, I feel like this, this conversation has been had a million times, but we don't really talk about it that much on this show. | ||
So I'm interested in getting into sort of like the Andrew Tate effect where, you know, to be honest, I'm not the biggest fan of Andrew Tate, just strictly from like the way he talks about women and stuff. | ||
It just doesn't vibe with me that much, but I get it. | ||
I understand why he is attractive to young men who are looking for, you know, a role model that's not going to demonize them and, you know, tell them that they're crap and worthless and, you know, just submit. | ||
So it's like, is there a way to, is there a way to reach out to young men that's not going to piss off the leftists and the liberals and the feminists? | ||
Because, you know, clearly Tate is like on the extreme side of that masculinity spectrum or however you want to phrase it. | ||
And you know obviously that scares people in the way he says things there's a little bit abrasive But it's like he's the only one speaking to young men who's addressing these problems Who's not telling him you know just shut up and take it so yeah? | ||
No, I'm you know Andrew's a good friend of mine. | ||
He's been on the show a bunch of times You know he was in Miami recently I linked up with him like the thing is I think we've gotten to a point now where it's like guys were sleepwalking for so long, and I blame our generation for this. | ||
Like a lot of our guys, like me and you woke up, but like a lot of guys our age are like totally blue-pilled, totally liberal, totally like, yeah, women and men are equal. | ||
Like they don't want to embrace their mask and murder performance. | ||
Yeah, like they're losers. | ||
So I think what Andrew kind of did was he kind of like came in and like interrupted the sleepwalking, right? | ||
Guys like him, myself, you know, guys like Nick Fuentes, Nico, we woke up a lot of young guys to like, hey, Like, stop being a simp. | ||
Stop giving attention to these women that, quite frankly, don't like you or respect you. | ||
Stop being a bum. | ||
Like, stop watching porn. | ||
Like, that's a huge problem with young men, is pornography, right? | ||
It's an evil industry. | ||
So, that's kind of what I think we needed to do. | ||
Yeah, I mean, can it be abrasive a bit? | ||
Yeah, but I think to get attention a lot of times, you have to almost like, would just, Which is how much information people are getting with social media and stuff like that. | ||
They're constantly going through. | ||
You need to be able to break the pattern almost. | ||
And sometimes you have to be abrasive to do it. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
No, that's true. | ||
The art of interruption is, you know, plays an important role here. | ||
And, you know, again, Andrew Tate is hilarious. | ||
He has a lot of really good takes. | ||
But it's like, you know, there's this there's this weird, like, well, it just doesn't resonate with me, like wanting to make money and have fast cars and like have a ton of women. | ||
Like I'd rather have one really good woman than ten thousand Not good win. | ||
Fair. You know, for lack of a, you know, instead of using a less polite term. | ||
I think the most important thing is, because I've said this too before, like, We just want guys to like be able to make the choice, right? | ||
Because like most guys can't even get one woman or if they do get one, they're monogamous by force, not like by necessity, not because they want to be. | ||
So I think as long as the guys are in a position where like I'm choosing where I want one woman, I'm the leader in my household, I tell her what to do, not the other way around. | ||
I think that's the most important thing is men finally being able to like be decision makers in their life. | ||
Because what's effectively happened now is like women run everything. | ||
It's like happy wife, happy life. | ||
No, it's happy king, happy kingdom. | ||
Yeah, that's hilarious. | ||
Well, and it's one of the things like you were just saying, you know, there's this phenomenon and it's, sorry ladies, it's literally baked into your biology, wanting something that you don't actually want. | ||
Uh, where, you know, if you ask a woman what she wants, she might say, well, caring and whatever. | ||
But in reality, when she's out there, you know, at the club at night or whatever, it's not the nice guy. | ||
It's the guy who knows what he wants. | ||
It's the guy who is confident and kind of aggressive. | ||
They're the ones that are, they're actually attracted to. | ||
So in saying this, you know, you're, you're actually giving women what they actually want instead of what they say they want. | ||
And it's just, and it's just a fact of reality. | ||
And that comes back to what I was saying before with, you know, what they say versus what they do are two different things. | ||
And I talk about this all the time, how, like, with women, right, the things that arouse them are unflattering, you know, degrading them, you know, being super assertive, dominant, whatever. | ||
There's a reason why women love books like Fifty Shades of Grey. | ||
Right. And they love these, like, novels where the guy's super assertive and dominant, right? | ||
They love that stuff because women fall in love with their, like, imagination, right? | ||
And they get turned on by their imagination. | ||
Like, for them, it's really cognitive. | ||
But, like, What they like is they want you to be a good guy, a nice guy. | ||
But the problem with women is when they give you, when they dispense their advice of what they like in men, they assume attraction. | ||
They always leave out that. | ||
They're already assuming the guy's good looking and tall and he's going to take care of me and he already has these things like figured out. | ||
But what they don't, what men don't realize is when women say what they like, they're assuming attraction already. | ||
So when they're saying, I want these good things like be a nice guy and a gentleman, whatever. | ||
That's assuming she likes you in the first place. | ||
But the problem is that guys don't even get to that point. | ||
So they follow this advice thinking it's going to work, but it doesn't. | ||
Because what she really is aroused by, which you need to tick that off first, is the stuff that's not flattering that they don't want you to know. | ||
Yeah. Well, and what is, do you think, behind sort of the collapse of relationships? | ||
Because I was just I, uh, my phone died, unfortunately. | ||
I always have an excuse for why I was listening in NPR, but literally, I don't listen to NPR unless, like, my phone's dead or something. | ||
So yesterday, my phone died, and I flipped on NPR. | ||
One thing that was funny is they actually were kind of talking positively about Trump's tariff, so I think they're worried about being defunded. | ||
That's a whole other story. | ||
But one of the things that is NPR, they were saying, yeah, you know, they're talking about how, like, The reporter woman was saying, yeah, my daughters just went to homecoming and they didn't have dates and how weird it was because in my day you'd be a pariah if you didn't have a date to a formal. | ||
But, you know, kids these days don't feel the need to have dates. | ||
You know, the person was saying, yeah, you know, I think romantic love is kind of like dying and that's a good thing. | ||
You know, people should just be able to have fun at the formal. | ||
But it was this weird sort of embrace of this idea of like people aren't getting married. | ||
There's like romantic interaction is sort of going down and we should embrace that. | ||
And that's a good thing. | ||
And that that is like kind of horrifying to me. | ||
It's like romance is like what makes life worth living. | ||
What's what's basically happened. | ||
I called the deregulation of the sexual marketplace. | ||
And what that is, is basically what's happened is. | ||
Assuming age of consent is met like anyone can hook up right and now obviously can lead to a lot of problematic things but this has come through feminism because Feminism has allowed women to kind of be in the in the buyer seat to a level that's unprecedented And what's up happening when feminists don't know this is they've inadvertently given all the leverage and the power to the top-tier guys Right because now women make their own money. | ||
They're successful They're able to enter the workforce and do what they want to do and have an education so their standards go up alongside their success So what ends up happening is a smaller percentage of men qualify for their new standards, and these men that do qualify, a bunch of girls are chasing them. | ||
So to make it very simple, it's more complex than this, but basically 80-90% of the women are chasing like 5-10% of the men. | ||
And these guys, since they have all these women, don't want to settle. | ||
And that's what ends up happening where These guys are the commitment phobes or the F-boys as they would say. | ||
And that's why guys that are higher status typically don't want to commit. | ||
Or they have a main girl but then they have multiple women. | ||
Because they can do so and this is what feminism has actually done. | ||
So women think they liberated themselves but the reality is they actually enslaved themselves to the top tier guys because they can't actually lock these dudes down in long-term relationships. | ||
Right, because monogamy is actually kind of unnatural, right? | ||
Genetically, we're not predisposed to stay with one person. | ||
That sort of has to be enforced socially. | ||
And so back in the day, it was basically, you know, it was one per one man for every one woman. | ||
And your goal was to sort of find the person you were compatible with. | ||
And so if you have, you know, a population split into two by the genders, you know, each, each woman is just trying to match up with, with her equal, you know, version of man. | ||
Whereas it's sort of the inner family reinforced that too, right? | ||
The family was involved more. | ||
They would be like, Hey, we need to find you this guy. | ||
Cause the father and the brother would kind of come in and like, Curbed a woman for making bad Reproductive decisions or bad mate decision because the problem with women especially when they're young and attractive is they're aroused by and want to be with the bad boys That don't necessarily give the commitment that they need so the father and the brother's job or you know the male people in the family Their job was to come in and be like look this guy's gonna be a good long-term partner you're gonna marry him and then because of shame because of religion because of society because of You know the church I don't | ||
though she might not have been like all the way fulfilled like her duty to her man overrode her personal like happiness and uh fulfillment but now women uh prioritize their personal happiness over the family so it's like completely reversed because cheryl sirenberg is cheryl siren sandberg and you know gloria steinem and all these other feminists who Also Jews. | ||
They tell women to prioritize their personal happiness over family. | ||
Feminism is, I think, one of the biggest destroyers of the nuclear family, for sure. | ||
Well, and there was the woman who, I think she worked for Vanity Fair or something. | ||
I wish I could remember the exact name of the publication and of her. | ||
But it was a pretty famous case where she wrote and An essay basically after, you know, she'd been the head of this women's magazine for decades and she went sort of, you know, now that I'm not doing anymore, I'm realizing like we were lying the whole time. | ||
I was telling women to go out and be feminist and don't be tied down to a man and don't be, don't, you know, have kids. | ||
Meanwhile, you know, she was living with her husband. | ||
She had a husband. | ||
She had kids. | ||
She was living a very traditional life. | ||
So you're right. | ||
I mean, a lot of times the feminists are selling things to women that they don't believe themselves and they aren't living themselves. | ||
Uh, and they actually know better. | ||
There it is, yeah. | ||
Sex and the City writer Candace Bushnell, 60, admits she, uh, regrets choosing a career over having children. | ||
She's now truly alone. | ||
That's actually not the, you know, it was a magazine editor that I was talking about, but again, you see, there's a lot of examples of this. | ||
They're selling this lifestyle that they themselves don't believe in or that they, you know, get to the end of their lives and realize, yeah, gee, that was all a mistake and I propagandized it. | ||
Yeah. Yeah. | ||
And it's bad because the problem with women, right, is like they have a finite amount of time to be at their peak, um, you know, Yeah. | ||
You know have sexual relations with a bunch of men and what's happening is well not only do they like destroy their ability to pair bond Um, once it's happening, the more partners she has, the less likely she'll be able to be in a long, long term, you know, happy relationship. | ||
So it's like literally like scientific studies. | ||
They show like the more sexual partners you have before getting married, the less likely you are to have a fulfilling marriage. | ||
Absolutely destroys it. | ||
Yeah. Like this is what the women that are, um, that are, uh, married virgins do the best, right. | ||
Or lower body counts. | ||
So, you know, the reality is that feminism simply doesn't adhere. | ||
It's a biology like it looks good on paper right but so did communism and it just doesn't work. | ||
It's funny yeah it's very it's no there's there's a lot of uh similarities to that and it's funny because you know science like how do I even express this like you can you can go in and do all these scientific studies and like what you end up with is tradition because you know people have this idea of like tradition especially like religious tradition as superstition as being you know what I always say is like you know my grandparents my grandmother's They didn't get married and have kids and be stay-at-home wives because they had to or because they were compelled to by some, | ||
you know, superstition or like religious duty. | ||
It's because they're like, no, this is how you have the best life. | ||
This is how you're, you're the happiest. | ||
This is how your husband's happiest. | ||
This is how you raise the happiest kids. | ||
This is what you're actually supposed to do. | ||
And it's almost like we, we, It was that way for so long, it became ingrained. | ||
People forgot the reasons that we did that. | ||
So now we're trying all these other experimental, we'll do polycules and well, you know, maybe homosexuality is equal to heterosexuality. | ||
And it's like, we're just going to end up having to go back to tradition because that was a, that was developed and honed over thousands of years of trial and error of this is the best way to be, to live. | ||
But the stable societies that led to, you know, it just worked. | ||
And, um, you know, unfortunately, You know, there's a bunch of reasons why they push feminism, right? | ||
Double the workforce, you know, lower the wages. | ||
For sure. | ||
But it's been a huge lie and I think women are starting to slowly kind of wake up because I've brought girls on my show and they're in their 30s and they're single and they're like, oh man, like, yeah, like I kind of, it kind of sucks, right? | ||
and if they could turn back the clock, they would, but it's too late. | ||
I always use the analogy, like, I always say the analogy, like, women are like, um, trust fund babies, right? | ||
Like, they, they get their million dollars up front, and if they don't invest it properly, um, they're gonna take it now. | ||
Versus men, they're self-made millionaires, you know? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | |
So what ends up happening is, like, women gamble the money, they go to the casino when they turn 18, they're like, oh my god, this is so fun, and then next thing you know... | ||
10-15 years later, they leave the casino negative. | ||
That's hilarious. | ||
Versus the men, if we do the work, right, we don't get the money guaranteed like they do, but if we do the work, we can become self-made millionaires and let that money go, you know, into a longer period of time. | ||
Yeah, you know, that's actually a pretty brilliant way of putting it, because like, when you look at a, like a young woman with her beauty, with her life ahead of her, with her, like, She is literally like the wealthiest person in the world. | ||
Absolutely. What she has is priceless and she can fit her that away and spin that or she can invest that wisely. | ||
That's a brilliant way to put it. | ||
Dude, she can be like, you know, if you look at like a chess board, right? | ||
An attractive young woman at her peak is like the queen. | ||
She can move in as many spaces as she wants in any direction, right? | ||
Versus the king only gets one spot at a time. | ||
But what I always tell guys is like, you're the king. | ||
If you're surrounded, the game is over. | ||
And at the end of the day, you can lose the queen and then get another pawn to the other side and make it a queen. | ||
Women are replaceable. | ||
They really are, right? | ||
Because the thing is, is that the things that make them attractive are very common. | ||
Be beautiful. | ||
Don't be a pain in the butt and you'll be fine. | ||
But like with men, it's way harder to become, you know, that guy. | ||
And a young, attractive woman, she could be in rooms with millionaires. | ||
But as a man, you're not going to be in that room unless you're a co-millionaire. | ||
So you're a millionaire as well. | ||
So I think guys need to also understand that you're the prize and you're supposed to be the prize. | ||
The woman should be looking up to you all the time. | ||
Like this whole egalitarian mindset of me and my girl are equal. | ||
No, I'm superior to in every way. | ||
So I tell you what to do. | ||
Be in the kitchen. | ||
Make a sandwich. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Are you married? | ||
No, I got a girlfriend. | ||
I began to suspect. | ||
It's a very good theory, but in practice, I don't know, it falls short a little bit. | ||
But there does have to be, I mean, it's like there has to be mutual respect, but then, you know, there does. | ||
You gotta be the final decision maker as the guy. | ||
Well, you gotta be the final decision maker, but you have to But you know be making decisions on behalf of the woman obviously and and you know there's the first story her interests have to be You know, you know everything that you do like if you're a good husband or a good boyfriend every decision you make Should be benefiting her too because it benefits you and you're the provider like I don't believe in women working I think the man should be working. | ||
He's a provider. | ||
She's at home with the family. | ||
So everything that you do you work not just for yourself In your legacy, but you work for her and the family. | ||
Women should not work. | ||
I find it ridiculous to me that, like, a woman is, like, taking direction from another man. | ||
Now, if she wants to work electively, that's one thing, but I think we should be electively. | ||
We'll pick it up right there on the other side. | ||
Myron Gaines, we've got to do a quick commercial break. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, welcome back, folks. | |
This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, coming to you live this Friday morning from the Infowars World Headquarters in studio with Myron Gaines. | ||
I saw somebody on X say they didn't make it four minutes into American Journal. | ||
I got to say, we got to do something. | ||
It's too early to be running the bound reports about the child sex material online. | ||
It's like no one wants to wake up to that. | ||
We need a little soft intro coming in. | ||
So I feel you. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I will tell you this. | ||
We did use it when I was on a job. | ||
One of the things I used to take great amount of pride in was catching, you know, the PDFs. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
So we had child exploitation groups. | ||
So when I was in Laredo, Texas, right, I was in a human smuggling group, right? | ||
But I used to do drug cases and stuff like that. | ||
But we had a child exploitation group where they had the sheriff's office and a bunch of other guys there. | ||
And they'd go after, you know, to be talking to these guys in chats and everything else like that. | ||
And one of my buddies, a friend of mine I used to play like Overwatch with, he was in that squad. | ||
So anytime they had warrants or whatever, because this is back when I was 24. I was like the young fit guy in the office. | ||
They're like, hey, we got a warrant coming up on XYZ day. | ||
Can you come out and help? | ||
Sure. So I'd always be on these search warrants and arrest warrants helping them out with the, you know, taking these guys down. | ||
So it was always fun. | ||
You know I never wanted to really like look at the evidence or anything because like doing the investigations is tough but I was just like you know what just call me when you guys want to go pick them up I'll be there um so it was always like good and then I did a couple like streams with Vitality where we'd catch these predators man so dude it's a problem there's so many of them you can be you can spend every single day catching predators it's so common yeah unless they arrest you and charge you with a felony like they did with uh With Alex Rosen and one thing he always always stuck out to me with he said is he's like if you have a kid on the internet It's not a question of | ||
if it's a question of when like 100% your kid is being approached your kid is being solicited by creeps 100% easy, you know, and he would just talk about you know, we make a new fake profile, you know to catch these guys We put a picture of a young girl on it within 10 minutes. | ||
They have four different dudes, you know messaging these girls So yeah, it's a big issue It's a big issue. | ||
It's just like man sometimes doing the morning show. | ||
It's like can we just talk about puppies for a little while? | ||
We spend the first 30 minutes and not talking about all the horror going on. | ||
It's wild. | ||
Yeah, things are things are crazy, man. | ||
I mean, how do you how do you deal with just like knowing all this stuff? | ||
You know, there's the classic like ignorance is bliss and that's certainly true and I've you know, I feel like I was lucky. | ||
I don't know. | ||
What was your path? | ||
So lame to say like what was your path to the red pill cuz I feel like I I woke up after like 9 11 I was like, you know 12 years old So I feel like I've been sort of in this for so long. | ||
It doesn't even affect me I feel bad for the people that that woke up like last year. | ||
Yeah, and suddenly got like 20 years of 4chan Jew memes. | ||
Like, you know, like the Matrix just like into their head and suddenly they know Kung Fu. | ||
It's like, I know how to be an anti-Semite. | ||
You know, it's like, you know, I feel bad for these people. | ||
It's like, you're supposed to ease your way into this stuff. | ||
You're supposed to take your time so it doesn't fry your brain. | ||
Yeah, I love this, this thing right here. | ||
This, this little animation that they made. | ||
You know, and shots on the Grapers too, man. | ||
You know, it's, so, So, my thing when I look at the red pill, I look at it as like nothing more than the truth, right? | ||
And there's the red pill on women, there's the red pill on politics, there's the red pill on the Jews, or feminism, whatever. | ||
And when it comes to women, like my mom kind of red-pilled me early on, like, hey, because I come from a Muslim background, right? | ||
My mom is from Sudan, my dad's from Sudan. | ||
And, you know, obviously, like, my mom is the one that told me, like, hey, Better not marry some American chick, man. | ||
Like, they're all sluts. | ||
You gotta find a chick that's gonna cook and clean for you. | ||
Like, she's not gonna backtalk you, whatever. | ||
So when I remember my mom telling me this as a kid, I was like, mom, what are you talking about? | ||
But now as an adult, I'm like, wow, she was right. | ||
And then when it comes to, like, politics and stuff like that. | ||
So if you grew up, like, in an Arab or Muslim household, like, you're always gonna be aware of, like, you know, The Jews right? | ||
Fighting or whatever, you know when they say the Jews they're like no those people right there that like are trying to kill me Yeah, they're talking like IDF is real. | ||
Yeah, it's the same way that we say like the Texan the Californians It's not like a pejorative. | ||
It's just like no, that's who they are. | ||
That was always funny I've always been like familiar with like what's going on in Palestine obviously because of that but when it comes to like their influence in our American government Yeah, it's been a few years and I that have noticed I'm like, oh my god, like it's it's it's crazy, dude It's absolutely wild how much We're good to | ||
go. You know, we find out that James Jesus Angleton, you know, was working with the Israeli intelligence agencies to help them procure the nuclear bomb that JFK didn't want them to get. | ||
And you're like, what's going on here? | ||
And then you had these secret, like, hearings in the 70s. | ||
Yeah, well, JFK is one of those things where, and this is actually kind of a good example for how I always think about this stuff, is if you talk about the JFK assassination, you can go, You know, forever, you know, growing up or whatever, you always heard like all these different theories where it's like it could have been the Russian communists, could have been the Cuban rebels, it could have been the Italian mafia, could have been the Texas oilman, it could have been the American CIA, it could have been the Jewish Mossad. | ||
Whoa, whoa, whoa, dude, what are you, anti-Semite? | ||
Oh, so Jews have to be in charge of everything, huh? | ||
You just think that they're... | ||
And it's like, well, hold on. | ||
Every one of these groups I mentioned had an ethnicity attached to it. | ||
I wasn't accused of being anti-Italian for saying it was the mob or anti-Russian for saying it was the communists. | ||
So what is it about this other group of people that's equally viable as the Texans? | ||
But it's like the reaction to that or the shutting down, it's like I'm not thinking about them as any different than any of these other groups. | ||
Yeah, it is. | ||
And with JFK assassination, it's one of those things where it's like, you can be looking at all this and it's all of this information. | ||
It's all convoluted. | ||
And then, but because you never hear about Israel's connection, then as soon as you hear about Israel's connection, it's like, everything like clicks into place. | ||
It's like, oh, now all this other stuff. | ||
I got a tinfoil hat moment, kind of tinfoil. | ||
So the most popular movie or media piece of media that covers the JFK assassination is obviously the Oliver Stone 1991 film. | ||
I find it interesting that, like, in that film, they talk about the Italian Mafia, they talk about the CIA, etc. | ||
But the Israeli angle is completely gone from the movie. | ||
And I thought to myself, why didn't they not mention, well, we know obvious reasons why not, but then you actually, like, research the movie and you find out, well, Oliver Stone's real name is Silverstein. | ||
Then you find out that the guy that funded the movie was a dude named Arnon Milchan. | ||
Arnon Milchan is a Jewish Zionist billionaire who literally is a spy. | ||
He admitted back in Israel on Israeli television that he was a spy. | ||
For the Israeli intelligence agency and not only this it gets crazier He was an asset for their unacknowledged nuclear weapons program right and then you find out well JFK What was his big beef with Israel their nuclear program? | ||
so the guy that funded the movie for JFK in America left out a critical piece of the issue with the JFK situation in the movie and he was an intelligence asset for the program that JFK was trying to stop and That sounds like a coincidence to me. | ||
Crazy! That sounds like a crazy coincidence to me, Myron. | ||
How dare you draw a line. | ||
I call it a co-incidence at this point. | ||
A co-incidence at this point. | ||
Well, and I mean, but this is the thing, and I feel the same way about like World War II, where if all you're told is one story from one side and you're missing a part that makes the whole thing make sense, and you know, it's the classic example where it's just like, You're telling me that, like, all of Germany, this incredibly, like, advanced, uh, you know, intelligent country, just went insane for a couple years and then went back to being normal? | ||
They just- Yeah. | ||
Some guy named Hitler was like, let's all hate the Jews, and they were all like, okay. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
There's a part of it that doesn't make sense. | ||
There was the other side of the argument that even if you don't agree with it, if you don't acknowledge it, Intelligent, thoughtful, inquisitive, skeptical people will see the story they're being told and go, I'm missing something here. | ||
So then they go out and look for what that missing thing is, and what they're presented with is the equal and opposite presentation of, instead of, you know, the Nazis never did anything good, and there was no reason that anybody liked them, and they were just pure evil, to the flip side, which is like, you know, these 10-hour long documentaries, Europa or whatever, where it's like, actually, the Nazis were saints and never did anything wrong. | ||
And it's like, if we just tell the whole truth about it, There wouldn't be the misunderstanding. | ||
There wouldn't be the extremes on both sides. | ||
You can say, here's why the Germans were making this choice. | ||
Here's how it turned out. | ||
Here's how it was bad. | ||
Yes, he made the autobahn. | ||
Yes, you know, he had this economic success. | ||
At the same time, look at how he was treating people. | ||
They're beating, they're beating the crap out of people. | ||
They're throwing people in camp. | ||
So if you don't just tell the whole story honestly and truthfully without any bias, without either focusing on the A group of people because you're biased, or ignoring that group of people because you're biased. | ||
Just tell the whole truth, and you won't have this dichotomy that just makes everything confusing. | ||
And I'll say this, because I literally, actually this came up when I was talking with Alex yesterday, I was like, yeah I'm like going through a mind cough because I'm starting to question, I'm starting to like do a deep dive on World War II right now, and I'm early on in my stages, I'm like reading mind cough, I'm going through things, because yeah, I agree with you, they lied to us about 9-11. | ||
They lied to us about the USS Liberty. | ||
They lied to us about JFK. | ||
They lied to us about RFK. | ||
They lied to us about so much. | ||
Sirhan Sirhan did not shoot RFK. | ||
Like, at all. | ||
So, I'm like, in my mind, I'm like, dude, they've lied about everything in history, so I'm gonna go and look into World War II as well. | ||
Like, this guy, I call him Top H, aka The Mustache Man, like, they're over here saying... | ||
They're always saying, like, he's so evil, blah, blah, blah. | ||
Right? And it's six million numbers. | ||
So I'm like, you know what? | ||
I'm going to do my own independent research. | ||
And, you know, I'm in the middle of it now. | ||
But, you know, I think that we've been lied to about World War II quite a bit. | ||
Well, yeah, I mean, we definitely haven't. | ||
And the lies were being spread at the time as part of war propaganda. | ||
Yeah, sure. | ||
You know, I- That's what's about Gaza in 2024, 2025. | ||
The mass grapes, right? | ||
The mass, you know, then we find out that they activated the Hannibal Directive on October 7th, right? | ||
First, it was 2,000 dead. | ||
Then it was 1,200 dead. | ||
Then you find out that 1,200 were- 400 of those 1,200 were enemy combatants, IDF members. | ||
Then you find out that the Hannibal Directive was run that day where Israel was killing their own people shooting into the kibbutz. | ||
Then you find out that the Hellfire missiles From the from the choppers Killed a lot of the concert goers because Hamas doesn't have the ability to burn those cars incinerate them the way that they did and then you have gone Admitted he literally made it like a month ago. | ||
I came out on Israeli television that they activated the Hannibal directive on that day Yeah, so it's like you know you know I love about that is when they go they go It is illegal to question the events of October 7th in Israel. | ||
It's you know it's a it's a It's a crime you cannot question, but we're investigating them. | ||
Yeah, okay, all right, okay, fine. | ||
So there's an investigation going on. | ||
40 beheaded babies, babies in ovens. | ||
I have a joke, you know, I do these like pitch meetings and I was writing one about Gaza and Israel and the joke was, it's a bad joke, but it was gonna be, you know, the one guy's going, there were 40 beheaded babies in ovens and the guy's like, I don't think that's true. | ||
unidentified
|
What do you question the Holocaust too? | |
Is that guy's like, should I? | ||
I didn't before but like you're telling me there were 40 dead babies and now you're telling me I'm a holocaust sniper for saying that that's not true. | ||
It's like just stop lying. | ||
Just stop lying and we wouldn't be in this situation. | ||
The lampshades and all this other stuff. | ||
It's like the stories are so ridiculous now and in October 7th actually, you know, I did a whole like long tweet about this, but I'm gonna summarize it. | ||
October 7th Made people really start to realize, like, they lied about October 7th. | ||
What else did they lie about? | ||
It created basically, like, everyone's behind Israel right after October 7th happened. | ||
And then they started pushing out this propaganda. | ||
Then we saw them bombing and killing innocent people. | ||
Destroy, like, literally, we know 50,000 are dead kids or, like, innocent people gone. | ||
And then we don't even know the hundreds of thousands that are buried under the rubble. | ||
So it's like, you know, look, violence is never acceptable. | ||
The loss of Israeli life, the loss of the Palestinian life, completely unacceptable. | ||
But Like We got to be have a dishonest discussion here like Israel's been lying about so much when it comes to this war to you know Manufacture the outrage that they need to obviously wage the asymmetrical warfare that they've done over the past year plus like The majority of people that are getting killed are our kids have 50% of Gaza are minors. | ||
Yeah. No, it's yeah, it's it's unbelievably brutal and I'm You know, I'm sick. | ||
I'm sick of the idea that like we Uh, it just all all of all of the all of the things that people say when you talk about this stuff where it's like if you're not on one side you must be on another or you know you should go live there they want to kill you and it's like look nobody says this when you talk about Chinese people enslaving the Uyghurs right nobody's like oh I don't go live with the Uyghurs then the Uyghurs would chop your nuts off it's like nobody says that it's like no you can see bad things happening you speak out about especially if your country is so | ||
deeply involved in the conflict even if you're not Boots on the ground, which actually we are but even if you weren't you can still have a comment You can still say things about this and and then yeah, look at this. | ||
Yeah The thing is like you couldn't criticize Israel before October 7th You would get one of the fastest ways to get banned on the main social media platforms where there's YouTube Instagram Facebook Etc was talk about Zionism Israel, etc before October 7th Most Americans didn't even know what Zionism was before October 7th Most of them didn't. | ||
So it's like, but then obviously it exploded in popularity after that, which is great because more people are waking up. | ||
But before, dude, you know, you talked about Israel or Jews or any of that stuff, Jewish power, bro, ADL was coming after you, Media Matters writing a hit piece. | ||
We got demonetized on YouTube for it, right? | ||
So, but now more people are speaking up so they can't censor everybody, which is good. | ||
Yeah. And my thing was always just like, you know, okay, if we're, if we're open and cavalier about saying, you know, the Muslims did this, then, you know, I felt like personally like a coward if I was like I'm willing to say it about Muslims but I'm not willing to say it about about Jews because I want to protect them or I I have this just like feeling that's been implanted in my head of like ooh don't say that that's dangerous and it's like but why? | ||
Why am I okay with talking about these people as a group but not these people as a group? | ||
I either have to be able to talk about both of them or neither of them. | ||
I'll just talk about both of them. | ||
Yeah I agree like we we got to be able to have these conversations I mean look I grew up in a Muslim household I've said a bunch a bunch of times then you get mad at me I say look Sharia law simply is not compatible with democracy. | ||
It's not going to work. | ||
If you guys are the majority and you want to go ahead and run an Islamic nation, it's going to be completely antithetical to the American Constitution. | ||
Islam doesn't allow freedom of speech, so it's not going to work. | ||
And they get mad when I say that, but like, look, you got to be able to talk about all things like, hey, you know, Israel is problematic. | ||
Indians stink. | ||
Well, hold on. | ||
Black people are criminals! | ||
Sorry, my bad. | ||
I got a little excited there. | ||
Let's jump from one sensitive topic to another one. | ||
This just delivered me. | ||
Breaking news here. | ||
You haven't heard this because nobody's heard it yet. | ||
Russell Brand has now been charged with rape and sexual assault by London's Metropolitan Police. | ||
The police has said in the past few minutes that the comedian and chief of the host will be charged with one count of rape One count of indecent assault, one count of oral rape, and two counts of sexual assault after detectives started investigating 18 months back. | ||
These investigations were sparked by allegations reported by Channel 4 and the Sunday Times. | ||
The charges are related to four separate women. | ||
This, I guess, took place in 1999, 2001, 2004, and 2005. | ||
Wow. You want to see that? | ||
So this just dropped. | ||
Wow. I remember when they, because they demonetized him on YouTube for this and he didn't, there was no open case, nothing. | ||
I remember when this broke originally. | ||
So they actually charged him. | ||
Is he going to have to go? | ||
Yeah, he's going to, he's going to go turn himself in because he's, he was here in the United States. | ||
I think he's in Florida. | ||
Oh, is he? | ||
I assumed he was still in the UK. | ||
No, I think he's in Florida. | ||
I think he goes back and forth, but I think he lives in the U.S. now at this point. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. Well, that's troubling. | |
I don't know. | ||
England, you know, dude, England... | ||
I was gonna go, but I'm not gonna go anymore. | ||
England is a failed nation, you know. | ||
But then again, you would realize... | ||
Anyone that's going to wear red coats to a war. | ||
A bunch of idiots. | ||
A bunch of idiots. | ||
Failed nation, man. | ||
They'll never live that down. | ||
They'll never live that down. | ||
There's a reason why we beat you guys in 1776. | ||
There's a reason why no one wants English breakfast. | ||
Your country sucks. | ||
unidentified
|
All right? | |
I ain't going back. | ||
unidentified
|
You guys want to go ahead and you want to go and say, we're going to arrest Andrew Tate and Russell Brand. | |
You know what? | ||
Screw you, England. | ||
You guys are failed. | ||
Failed nation. | ||
Everything about you guys sucks. | ||
Your teeth are always crooked and dirty. | ||
Austin Power sucks. | ||
We're making all sorts of enemies today. | ||
unidentified
|
I can't go back now. | |
I'm cooked. | ||
I can't go back now. | ||
America! America, number one. | ||
I made a mistake with my son teaching him about the revolution too early. | ||
Now he literally is like, he'll see a picture and he's like, oh, those are the bad guys. | ||
I'm like, why? | ||
He's like, they have the red coats on. | ||
He's convinced that like, if you're wearing a red coat, you're a bad guy. | ||
He's like, no, the red coats are the bad guys. | ||
unidentified
|
They are, man. | |
I'm like, yeah, yes. | ||
Okay, we'll go with that. | ||
But you know, again, this is the This is the problem with the system that we have and the fact that we live in a failed society. | ||
It's like, wouldn't it be nice to be able to... | ||
Maybe not nice. | ||
They're getting overrun by Pakistanis now anyway. | ||
Well, yeah. | ||
It's going to become G-Land soon. | ||
I know. | ||
In England. | ||
Russell Brand's real mistake was not doing this in collaboration with, you know, 50 other South Asian people. | ||
There you go. | ||
He would have been let off. | ||
He would have been scot-free. | ||
He would have been fine. | ||
Yeah. Did it with the Jeets? | ||
Yeah, he did it on a one-to-one basis, which is the real problem. | ||
But I would like to live in a world where, like, when you hear the London Metropolitan Police have charged somebody with a crime, you go, wow. | ||
They must have done it. | ||
Like, I'd like to be able to, like, have faith in the systems, you know, even these foreign systems, but it's like, knowing the way the UK acts, knowing the fact that they were letting out murderers while imprisoning, you know, fathers for Facebook, you know, Facebooking out an incorrect article. | ||
I don't trust this. | ||
I don't trust this at all. | ||
They put you in jail for tweets in England. | ||
They put you in jail for tweets, man! | ||
So I'm going to expect these people to be fair and just when it comes to Russell Brand and a sexual allegation? | ||
No, they're going to take this and they're going to... | ||
So, you know, it's like, maybe if this is true, I'd like to be able to say, hey, that guy's a rapist. | ||
But like, because they've so shattered the trust of everybody, I can't believe this. | ||
I don't trust it. | ||
Yeah, how are you going to? | ||
I don't trust it. | ||
And the thing is, too, like, people forget. | ||
Back then, Russell Brand was like a star. | ||
Like, huge. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like, this guy was an A-list celebrity back in the day. | ||
Like, A-list, A-list. | ||
I'm talking he was dating Katy Perry. | ||
Yeah, he married her. | ||
Yeah, he married her. | ||
Like, dude, women were throwing themselves at him, man. | ||
Like, bro. | ||
Well, I don't know any, like, even without knowing any details, without knowing the validity of the allegation, the fact that they're 20 years old, these allegations, Yeah. | ||
Yeah. You know, rape gangs continue unabated. | ||
Here you are arresting this guy 20 years later for rape. | ||
I'm a little suspicious, and this is the problem with a system that is so utterly untrustworthy and distorted and biased. | ||
Yeah, and I mean, statute of limitations? | ||
Like, what's going on here, man? | ||
And then the other thing too, I noticed that these charges came after him, like when the allegations came out originally, when he started questioning COVID, he had a viral clip Everywhere he was. | ||
I think it was Jimmy Kilmer somewhere. | ||
He went over the numbers with COVID. | ||
Yeah. And who owned what and everything. | ||
And he was naming names and talking numbers. | ||
And then. | ||
A couple days after? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah, he like sexually assaulted some people. | |
Yeah, well same thing happened with like Matt Gaetz and you know all these other people where it's like the moment they're about to like get in power they you know come out as an enemy it's like oh by the way did you know we've been holding this in our back pocket the whole time? | ||
I wish Matt Gaetz like stuck it out man. | ||
I really wish he stuck it out and like I think he could have gotten the the attorney general I think it would have done a better job than Pam Blondie I mean Bondi and you know he would have been fine but because if they got Pete Hexhead through Cash Patel, RFK, Tulsi Gabbard, they beat them all up in the Senate hearings. | ||
I think he should have went through and he would have got it. | ||
But guess what? | ||
He didn't take AIPAC money. | ||
He spoke out against the Anti-Semitism Act, which is a real sort of overarching goal that I spent an hour on yesterday. | ||
Him as Thomas Massey. | ||
Yeah. Like, you know, these guys are patriots, man. | ||
So I wish he really went through and stuck it out, man. | ||
I think he could have got it. | ||
If Pia Hexheth got it, Mike, dude, come on. | ||
Yeah, well, but, you know, it is that it's and this is the problem with the, you know, Israeli influence on our government is like, You can be 100% solid, but if you aren't solid on that topic, you're not going to get through. | ||
So, and, and, you know, that's the way that the control where they don't, it doesn't mean that like Pete Hegseth is a puppet that they're, you know, manipulating on, but it's like, okay, you have to fulfill this prerequisite. | ||
You have to be on our side on this topic every time. | ||
And if you're not like Matt Gaetz, where he says, Hey, it looks like this is going to make the gospel illegal. | ||
We shouldn't be passing this as anti first amendment. | ||
He's out, right? | ||
You have to be solid on that one topic. | ||
Because, like, I'm saying, like, he had similar allegations. | ||
And if they got headset through, I think they could have gazed through. | ||
All right. | ||
Well, this is another story. | ||
This is from tomorrow. | ||
This is about tomorrow. | ||
Anti-Trump protests expected to draw hundreds of thousands Saturday. | ||
Protest force rescheduling of Saturday White House tours. | ||
I mean, we only have, like, two minutes left in this program. | ||
But, like, what are they even doing? | ||
Like, what is the left doing? | ||
Are they just going to try to go full-fledged civil war? | ||
So they're just gonna like try to destroy the country because they lost an election? | ||
They always do, man. | ||
I've always, I said this a few times, like, I truly think the left is more violent than the right. | ||
100%? | ||
They get away with it! | ||
100%? | ||
They get away with it. | ||
They destroyed Minneapolis. | ||
Like, did we forget that they destroyed it for George Fenton Hall? | ||
They literally firebombed a GOP headquarters last week. | ||
People stopped talking about it an hour after it happened. | ||
But meanwhile, oh, you guys walked into the Capitol building, violent conservatives, put them in jail. | ||
January 6th, FBI, biggest investigation ever. | ||
Everyone goes to jail. | ||
Minneapolis, on fire. | ||
No one cares. | ||
Seattle destroyed. | ||
Portland destroyed. | ||
I mean, what do you think the odds are that the left is going to do, like, The January 6th, they're gonna be like, hey, if they stormed the Capitol and it wasn't so bad, let's us storm the Capitol, except they'll actually burn the Capitol down. | ||
Yeah, they will burn it. | ||
The thing with these guys is they're totally okay with violence. | ||
They're totally okay with looting. | ||
They're totally okay with stealing and doing all this stuff. | ||
It's just ridiculous, man. | ||
Yeah. It's just ridiculous. | ||
It's just like, what is the point of this, even? | ||
It's like the Democrats aren't even doing anything. | ||
BLM, I think, is one of the biggest We're good to go. | ||
Semi-violent protests it's like stop them now arrest them now dismantle these networks now So we don't have to enter into a civil war like condition where it's actually gonna be difficult And that's where we are because we we are so scared of being called racist We're so like bro. | ||
We got to call out the black people when they do stupid stuff, but people are so scared Oh my god. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't wanna be racist in the band now look at you that cities are on fire We got to get over it Myron Gaines. | |
Thank you so much for being us He's got a plane to catch folks following Myron Gaines X on X So a major scandal broke in about the last four hours, and I've done some more research into it, and it's gotten even worse. | ||
Great researcher Mike Benz noticed that Norm Eisen, the celebrated field marshal of Democrat Party Deep State Lawfare against Trump the last nine plus years, myself, and General Flynn, just countless others, Peter Navarro, the list goes on and on. | ||
This guy that goes around suing all these states, To make sure that Democrats can engage in classic election fraud, that illegal aliens can vote, that the borders stay wide open. | ||
He's the main guy that's filed over a hundred lawsuits and had all these picked judges do these injunctions that totally violate Article 3 of the Constitution, Federalist Paper 80, the Judicial Act of 1802. | ||
I mean, this is the guy really creating the blueprint for the attempted judicial coup in this country by Article 3 judges. | ||
Well, now, it turns out Norm Eisen did a big podcast and bragged how when he was the U.S. | ||
ambassador to the Czech Republic at 150-bedroom mansion under Obama, big CIA destabilization base that's come out previously, he did that. | ||
that Chief Justice Roberts went and stayed for over a week with him. | ||
in the last years of the Obama administration to make sure that their lawfare and their rule of law, that means judicial dictatorship, would continue on and frustrate any populist movement to ever control our country or stop all the USAID fraud or the EPA fraud, just all the mass theft that you see in legal aliens being signed up for Social Security and signed up for tax rebates when they haven't even worked here in many cases. | ||
I mean, to list the crimes of this guy is just stunning. | ||
The January 6th blueprint, all of it, the impeachment blueprints, all of it. | ||
This is the head guy. | ||
You know, Elias and others are under him. | ||
And so talking about conflict of interest, I mean, they talk about uh. | ||
This is Roberts literally quarterbacking according to Eisen all the garbage we've seen and also we now know all Years ago that Roberts went to all the lower courts and said, don't even hear the election 2020 evidence. | ||
So they wouldn't even hear it. | ||
So we didn't say there was no evidence because they wouldn't hear it. | ||
I mean, it just goes on and on. | ||
And again, the current architect of all this, uh, you know, trying to block Trump's constitutional activities to expose all this corruption, really save our country. | ||
Uh, and, and, and so here he is with, with Eisen, uh, doing this. | ||
He's also part of this big ends law group unofficially is a secret. | ||
Uh, and the group brags, they help get you in touch with people, you know, to make money and all the rest of this. | ||
I mean, this is just a clearinghouse of corruption. | ||
Right at the heart of the deep state tyranny is the judicial branch in this country. | ||
They're not all bad, but more and more, they're, you know, as overall are very corrupt, or at least cowards. | ||
There's very few that are really, really good and hardcore. | ||
So we have all this going on. | ||
And then you have, uh, the backdrop of a couple of weeks ago, uh, Chief Justice Roberts coming out saying, I don't want to hear about impeachment from Congress against these Article 3 judges that were created by Congress. | ||
I don't want to hear about it. | ||
Well, that's not your lane, buddy. | ||
And so it's really, really, really, really outrageous this is being tried. | ||
I've always been told by really good sources that Roberts is one of the most compromised people. | ||
Bush put him in, and you see the Democrat and Republican presidents together. | ||
It's a uniparty. | ||
They've been forced out in the open to admit that it's just them against Trump and the American people. | ||
And then the EU, the Chi-Coms, the globalists, and all the rest of it, that's what Trump's trade tariffs is about is our long surrender to the global system is over. | ||
And so if you support taking your country back and want prosperity and security and not have nuclear war with Russia, then you're for Trump, you're for the Infowar, you're for the great work of Doge and Musk. | ||
If you're not, you are part of the establishment and you're working for the bad guys. | ||
So yeah, Roberts needs to resign. | ||
I was told, you know, when he first got in, he was blackmailed. | ||
And that's, of course, you know, who the Bushes and others would want in there. | ||
Uh, so, uh, this is one big... | ||
Alright, this video goes on for a little bit longer. | ||
We're not going to be able to get the whole thing in there, but you can find and share it on Alex Jones's ex, at RealAlexJones. | ||
Find and share that video. | ||
We'll get into Norm Eisen and, uh, his cooperation, collaboration, suspicious friendship with Justice Roberts. | ||
Norm Isen is one of these deep state kingpins. | ||
And if you don't know about it, you're missing a big chunk. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is a Friday morning broadcast from the American Journal. | ||
Hope everybody's doing well. | ||
I feel thrown off. | ||
We usually have our guests in the third hour, but because of Myron's schedule, and you know, he was nice enough to actually come in here early, got in here at 7.45. | ||
I hardly achieve, if I'm being honest with you. | ||
So we appreciate him coming in early. | ||
We have a lot of news to get to today. | ||
I'm going to open up the phone lines for your calls in the next two hours. | ||
Take your calls about any and everything going on today. | ||
We have a lot of videos to get to and a lot of stories to tell. | ||
And I do want to get into who this Norm Eisen character is and why it's So strange why this story about him has so many strange occurrences like not only is He apparently very good friends with and going on international trips with the chief justice of the Supreme Court Which is like why is that happening? | ||
The other question is why does Norm Eisen have a hundred and fifty room palace in the Czech Republic? | ||
What has he done to earn that I wonder? | ||
But then again, Jeffrey Epstein had the most expensive single-family home in New York. | ||
So, yeah, maybe there's something about these guys. | ||
We're going to talk about all sorts of stuff today, including a video that just dropped. | ||
I haven't seen this yet. | ||
This video of Kamala Harris. | ||
But before we go to it, from Leading Report, this was published a few days ago, more Democrats So, according to Democrats, they're number one, the leader of their party, their avatar, their queen. | ||
Kamala Harris, followed shortly by Chuck Schumer, Followed by Barack Obama and Hakeem Jeffries. | ||
Followed in fifth place by no one. | ||
Bernie Sanders got beaten by no one. | ||
Dude, Bernie Sanders racks up L's like, like a Sesame Street character. | ||
You know, it's just pathetic. | ||
Do y'all remember? | ||
Do y'all remember back in 2024 when Bernie Sanders was leading the Democratic Primary candidates out of all of the declared people but was still being handily beaten by Joe Biden who had not announced he was candidate. | ||
Do you remember when Bernie Sanders was being beaten by somebody that wasn't in the race? | ||
And then Joe Biden entered and and won. | ||
Bernie Sanders. | ||
Just. That's the joke that this name is the joke. | ||
It is so pathetic, so I mean that is. | ||
Kamala Harris, Chuck Schumer, Barack Obama, Hakeem Jeffries, no one, Bernie Sanders, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. | ||
He literally got beaten by non-existence, by a ghost, by a figment. | ||
And then Joe Biden is ahead of Nancy Pelosi in the leadership poll. | ||
So yeah, is it any wonder the Democrats are becoming terrorists? | ||
I think I'd be a terrorist too if this was my leadership. | ||
Chuck Schumer, Kamala Harris, I just want to say these names. | ||
I just want to repeat to you just to conjure in your mind a room filled with these people and just imagine what it would be like to be in that room and what other room you would rather be in. | ||
Like, I don't know, a room From Temple of Doom that's slowly getting smaller until you're crushed into nothingness. | ||
Like, any room is better than a room with Chuck Schumer, Kamala Harris, Barack Obama, and Hakeem Jeffries. | ||
That's their leadership. | ||
That's your... | ||
I mean... | ||
I think we need to have a talk, Democrats. | ||
Democrats, why don't you come in here and sit down? | ||
We need to have a long, long conversation. | ||
About the choices that you choose to make And how appropriate they are how How almost metaphysically perfect these people are For a number of reasons, right? | ||
each one of these people almost embodies to a to a mythical degree like like they are the Like they're the gods the demigods the deities of certain Certain aspects of the democratic mind right from Kamala Harris you have the the shrieking minority woman who achieves despite failing that's just like Really, it's perfect. | ||
It's beautiful right nobody likes her she achieves nothing he fails relentlessly and Then she's promoted It's just like, yeah, okay, you're right. | ||
That is the Democrats. | ||
That if you're going to embody the Democrats in a single person, it's Kamala Harris. | ||
It's the person who both pretends to be an outsider, pretends to be a rebel, while is a literal cop, right? | ||
It's the person who pretends to be against the establishment while embodying the worst parts of the establishment. | ||
The person who slept her way to the top and then Pretends to be a champion for women. | ||
A person who is Indian by nationality and heritage and pretends to be black to get the black vote. | ||
Just screwing over the minority representation, weaponizing, utilizing, taking advantage of it while it's all a total lie. | ||
I mean, now that I think, now that I'm actually thinking about it, I think they're right. | ||
She is. | ||
She is the leader of the Democratic Party. | ||
She's the avatar, the embodiment, the physical manifestation of all the corruption all the backhandedness all the all the falseness right that's the other thing is she's the party of joy i'm just we're just bringing joy back everyone it's joyful and then it's like behind the scenes and it's just like People just being beaten and beaten down and worn down and yelled at and screamed at and everybody's pissed off and backbiting and | ||
Selling each other secrets, and it's just awful. | ||
It's just they're all so awful They're all just terrible and then there's Chuck Schumer and then Chuck Schumer represents like the manipulative Jewish elite like conniving like just totally Totally like so disconnected from the average person. | ||
He doesn't know he's disconnected from the average person. | ||
I am of course thinking about the the cheeseburger incident. | ||
The cheeseburger incident! | ||
I'm just grilling. | ||
Let me do that right up here. | ||
I'm out here having a cookout with my good friends and it's just like raw meat on a unlit stove. | ||
Unlit grill. | ||
I mean, I'm telling you, you... | ||
We need to be making comedy movies. | ||
This is what I'm... | ||
What I'm realizing is just like, the Democrats as they exist are so... | ||
Like, you couldn't write it better. | ||
You could not imagine a better example than reality, than like what actually exists. | ||
And you have Hakeem Je... | ||
And then you've got Hakeem Jeffery and Obama, which is like sort of a... | ||
I don't know, is it... | ||
Are they the ego and the superego? | ||
It's like the narcissistic, self-important, again appointed because of his race, never actually achieved anything, went from being a one-term senator to president of the United States, like totally jumping the line. | ||
His whole background is a lie. | ||
His birth certificate is fake. | ||
He's a foreigner pretending to be an American. | ||
I mean, it's like, Again, these people, it's like, yeah, this is the Republican or the Democratic Party. | ||
And then you've got Hakeem Jeffries, who's like the shadow Obama. | ||
He's like the Obama that we have at home, right? | ||
He's the, we don't need to go out and buy Obama. | ||
We've got one at home and it's Hakeem Jeffries. | ||
And he's the embodiment of the theater school, the theater kid occupation of our government. | ||
The overly dramatic, overly verbose saying, Millions of words that mean absolutely nothing. | ||
Putting on an accent like he's Martin Luther freaking King at the Washington Monument in 1964. | ||
Like he's fighting the same fight as Martin Luther King. | ||
You know, singing hymns in Congress when they're voting down abortion measures. | ||
It's just... | ||
Yeah, what Obama had, he has that. | ||
Jeffrey's stock rises as Pelosi's successor. | ||
Yeah, what Obama has... | ||
Hakeem Jeffries ordered from Wish.com. | ||
He ordered it from Alibaba. | ||
He's off-brand Obama. | ||
And it's hilarious. | ||
So, yeah, no, this is the leadership of the Democratic Party. | ||
And it's no wonder they're Molotov cocktailing places. | ||
It's no wonder. | ||
How would you feel? | ||
How would you feel if Trump never came along And we're in the same situation we had now, except they were pointing to like Jeb Bush and Reince Priebus and going, these are the leaders of the Republican Party. | ||
Yeah, I'd be throwing Molotov cocktails through car dealerships too, wouldn't I? | ||
Wouldn't you? | ||
If this was your leadership, if this was the political solution to your problems? | ||
Yeah, I'd also be looking for non-political solutions to my problems. | ||
I'd also be raging in impotent fury. | ||
unidentified
|
love you. | |
I do love it. | ||
I do love these people in a perverted sort of way. | ||
I just, I can't get over it. | ||
I didn't even realize. | ||
I was just bringing it. | ||
I didn't, you know what I expected? | ||
I thought, okay, I'm going to bring up this chart. | ||
I'm going to mention L is for Bernie Sanders. | ||
Yeah. Thanks Elmo. | ||
Thanks Elmo and Big Bird. | ||
I'm here to teach you today about the letter L. L is what you receive when you're Bernie Sanders. | ||
When you're a socialist and your entire philosophy is built on submitting to the authority, and the authority in this case is Hillary Clinton, you receive a big L, a big public L in front of everybody. | ||
And then they zoom in on your face during the convention. | ||
L upon L upon L. What was I saying? | ||
Yes, so I thought here's what I thought I thought in this segment I thought I'm gonna go to this video from Kamala Harris But first I want to set it up. | ||
I want to point out that the Democrats Think that Kamala Harris is their best option and she is the leader of their party according to them And that's all I was gonna bring up. | ||
I didn't realize that fifth place was no one followed quick order by Bernie Sanders and AOC So I had to spend a few minutes on this By the way, here's a question Who the hell is Ken Martin? | ||
Who's Ken Martin? | ||
They got a dude on here that I'm pretty sure is the is the bagger at a grocery store. | ||
He might be a used car salesman. | ||
Who is Ken Martin? | ||
And how is he on the list for the leaders of the Democratic Party? | ||
Who is Ken Martin? | ||
Can anybody tell me? | ||
Crew? Ken Martin? | ||
No, well, I could have told you looked like that for sure. | ||
Oh, he's that guy. | ||
He just got he's now like the leader of the DNC, right? | ||
I'm pretty sure. | ||
An American politician who has served as chair of the Democratic National Committee since 2025. | ||
Yeah, he just got put in. | ||
Yeah, try him out. | ||
Give him a shot. | ||
Interestingly, OK, Gavin Newsom is on there. | ||
OK. Wow, that's amazing. | ||
So in the in the list of the top 10 Democratic leaders, you have no one at 11%, other at just under 2%, and don't know at 4%. | ||
You have three non-human entities actually beating out the rest of the Democrats. | ||
No one, don't know, and other. | ||
So just so you're aware, when they say no one, that doesn't mean Like you would think maybe there'd be one option that was like, none of the above. | ||
That's not what that means though. | ||
I want to make this clear. | ||
When they say no one, they're choosing no one. | ||
That's not an absence of a choice, that is a choice for no one. | ||
You understand what I'm saying? | ||
They could have said other. | ||
They could have said my choice is not on this list. | ||
Now that would go into the other category. | ||
Don't know, I guess as Democrats they're just like, It's like well, so would you say no one's in charge and they're like no somebody probably is I just don't know who it is. | ||
I Just don't know who my leader is. | ||
I don't know who I'm supposed to support yet I haven't been that software hasn't been loaded in yet. | ||
So that choice has been made for me. | ||
I'm just not aware of it That it's out there somewhere and I support them and I will die for them and they need to be our leader I'm not sure who it is. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know So just to be clear don't know is different from other is different from no one My friends, you bow to no one. | ||
Except for Bernie Sanders. | ||
I don't get that meme. | ||
That seems like a leftist meme to me. | ||
That was some mixed messaging there. | ||
Who would Bernie Sanders be in the Lord of the Rings universe? | ||
Probably Gollum. | ||
Probably Gollum, actually. | ||
Constantly within reach of the ring, but never getting it. | ||
Dying for the ring, but never getting it. | ||
Yeah, he's Gollum that's I figured it out that I was actually pretty quick Bernie Sanders in the Lord of the Rings universe is in fact Gollum as he wastes away fantasizing fantasizing about the power he could have Living forever and never achieving anything Obsessed with gold There you go Wow the crew is I don't know where they're getting this stuff frankly, | ||
I don't want to know He's not Bilbo. | ||
unidentified
|
You're sure he couldn't be Bilbo? | |
Because there are some striking resemblances. | ||
It's, you know, there's something to it there seeing that clip you just played. | ||
unidentified
|
He had the power. | |
I see where you're going. | ||
And he gave it up. | ||
unidentified
|
But he lost the power. | |
I see where you're going with that. | ||
unidentified
|
Like that look right there in the eyes. | |
That's it. | ||
It's the look, yeah. | ||
It's true. | ||
But that's because Bilbo is becoming more Golem-like. | ||
You're seeing, this is, Bilbo is like Bernie Sanders in the 80s. | ||
But by now, he's full Gollum mode. | ||
All right. | ||
Sorry. Sorry, folks. | ||
It's Friday morning. | ||
We're just trying to have a little fun here, making fun of the Democrats. | ||
Let's go to this video, shall we? | ||
This is all just a lead up to this video. | ||
Kamala Harris is back in the spotlight. | ||
You know, I tweeted out the other day, like, man, so sad that Joe Biden died as soon as his administration ended. | ||
Because, like, I had to think about it for a second. | ||
It took me a second. | ||
Like, I read something that says, and I was like, wait, is Joe Biden dead? | ||
Did he die? | ||
I don't think I remember him dying. | ||
But also, where has he been for the last three months? | ||
Years or whatever, you know, like, but where is, I mean, has he been dead this whole time? | ||
Maybe. Maybe I'm not asking the right question, but it's pretty amazing how, how thoroughly gone the Bidens are. | ||
In the media landscape. | ||
And I'm sure he's laying like a squid. | ||
I'm sure he's laying like a desiccated squid on a beach somewhere. | ||
Like a jellyfish. | ||
Like a jellyfish. | ||
Uh, this creepy joker smile and exploded eyeball. | ||
He's not long for this world one way or the other, but Kamala- His little tentacles. | ||
Yes, he's laying somewhere. | ||
Tentacles splayed to the sun. | ||
But yeah, these people just disappeared and then Kamala Harris is she's made like two public appearances since her ignominious loss to Donald Trump both of them have been embarrassing both of them she's been Seemingly drunk. | ||
I'm not gonna say she was drunk, but But I think we all know she made one appearance at a Broadway show right that was one of her public appear I'm trying to think of how many times Kamala Harris has actually been Made statements in public since, well, much like other DEI hires, since she piloted the plane she was flying into the ground. | ||
The plane in this case being the Democratic Party. | ||
There's something, there's something just, I can't, like, I don't know. | ||
It really is, it's like the imagery is there. | ||
The imagery is there in real life. | ||
We don't even have to make it up or write it. | ||
It's just metaphysically these things are manifesting spontaneously. | ||
Because yeah, it really, you know, it seems like if you wanted an illustration, a metaphor for the Democratic Party, it's whatever that airline is that decided that their whole thing would be to have women pilots. | ||
That they would be It's time. | ||
It's time. | ||
It's time for a woman to take control. | ||
And it's just like... | ||
Well, why is the plane upside down? | ||
I've noticed that the plane is not... | ||
I've noticed that the wheels are pointing towards the sky and the fuselage is upside down. | ||
Does that have anything to do with the DEI program you're running, I wonder? | ||
Sir, that's not a plane. | ||
That is the Democratic Party. | ||
Sir, what you're looking at right now is in fact the... | ||
Democratic Party of the United States. | ||
Yes, I know it's upside down. | ||
We put a woman in charge. | ||
We put a woman in charge. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
It's DEI. | ||
It's because you put people that aren't qualified because you think they look good on a flyer. | ||
Stop making decisions on the basis of race and sex and you'll stop crashing planes and political parties. | ||
It's a pretty simple solution. | ||
Which is why they'll never do it. | ||
Here's the video. | ||
Kamala Harris has made her third public appearance since losing to Donald Trump. | ||
Let's see how well it went, shall we? | ||
unidentified
|
And these are the things that we are witnessing. | |
Oh my god, can we pause it? | ||
unidentified
|
Each day in these last few months. | |
Folks, let's all- I've never done this. | ||
I'm not one to- Let's all bow our head in prayer. | ||
Thank you, God. | ||
Thank you, Lord, delivering us from four years of Kamala Harris's voice. | ||
Just thank you, God, for giving us Donald Trump. | ||
I'm not even being... | ||
Amen. In Jesus's name, I pray. | ||
Amen. I'm not even being facetious. | ||
Thank God Donald Trump won this election. | ||
Everybody out there going, oh, we told you so, because we actually criticized Trump for his positions on Israel and other things. | ||
You didn't tell us crap. | ||
And thank God Kamala Harris is not our president. | ||
Thank God we don't have to listen to this voice. | ||
We don't have to hear this condescending, nails-on-a-chalkboard voice telling us that we're bad and evil and explaining like Dolores Umbridge why we have to be punished until we're great. | ||
I mean, it's like just thank God. | ||
This is actually, this is actually, we can actually do it now. | ||
Actually, let's get our mindsets in the right place to listen to Kamala Harris' voice, knowing that we only have to listen to it for a few seconds. | ||
And then if we choose never again, we don't have to hear it every day. | ||
We don't have to report on it every day. | ||
And let's remember that. | ||
So this is the, instead of treating this like what it is, a torture device, let's treat this, it's a little treat for us. | ||
We get to hear Kamala Harris, knowing that we can stop at any point and never hear it again. | ||
Kamala Harris, take it away. | ||
unidentified
|
... | |
missing. Each day in these last few months in our country. | ||
And it understandably... | ||
Oh my God. | ||
unidentified
|
... | |
creates a great sense of fear. | ||
Oh, it hurts. | ||
unidentified
|
Because, you know, there were many things that we knew would happen. | |
Many things. | ||
I'm not here, so I told you. | ||
So. Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
What? Wait, what, what? | ||
unidentified
|
Ha. Ha. | |
What is she even talking? | ||
What is that even? | ||
What were they cheering? | ||
What did she say? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
What just happened? | ||
We knew what would happen. | ||
I'm not here to say I told you so. | ||
unidentified
|
Ha, ha, ha, ha. | |
What does that mean? | ||
What did she say? | ||
Why were they cheering? | ||
What is she laughing at? | ||
What is going on? | ||
Put her back. | ||
Put her back in the cabinet she's been in the last few months. | ||
Put her back in the closet. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host Harrison Smith. | ||
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It really is. | ||
Now, the story that still dominates the political world are the tariffs, of course, as we're two days into Donald Trump's massive tariff announcement on Liberation Day. | ||
And I gotta say, as I was mentioning with Myron, I was listening to NPR yesterday, and I was, frankly, shocked and gratified At what I was hearing now, I don't know if this is because they've been getting more scrutiny recently And it's It's hard to explain. | ||
I should just grab the audio like it wasn't interesting enough to make a segment out of But it was this it was the our local NPR station and I believe it was a local Texas broadcast It wasn't a nationwide thing But they had on a guy with a deep Texas accent, dude from Waco. | ||
And he was talking about the damage that the tariffs would do. | ||
And he sort of had nothing. | ||
He sort of had no solid things to... | ||
He was just like, well, you know, it could, you know, inflation could go up. | ||
And it's like, okay. | ||
Oh, so you care about inflation now, do you? | ||
Interesting. That's new. | ||
That's new, actually. | ||
And so he's trying to make the tariff sound bad, and then it's actually the NPR interviewer guy who was pushing back on it, but the way he was doing it was almost like he didn't want to be doing it, but had to. | ||
And it was just funny to me. | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's going to be hard to get this across, but it was funny to me because you'd have one guy say, well, you know, He's like we actually America's actually already doing great in the car production where we already make a ton of cars here So we don't need to do this to have cars made here. | ||
We already have a ton made and the the NPR guy would go okay, but Not really, right? | ||
I mean a lot of our cars do come from Mexico and Canada and China. | ||
Oh, yeah I mean a lot of them do come but the way the way the NPR guy was saying it it's like Alright, I have to push back on this. | ||
I don't really want to. | ||
I'd rather go with the... | ||
I'd rather go with the narrative, right? | ||
I'd rather go with the narrative that, yeah, these tariffs are totally unnecessary, this is totally bad, but it's like he almost had to. | ||
He's like being obliged to like, be like, alright, let's give the other side a little bit. | ||
And I'm sorry I'm rambling and made this a little off topic. | ||
But like what came across to me was like how correct the right wing position was and how even when this NPR person was seemingly like having his arm twist and he was just like giving the bare minimum, like most is like obligatory, like, all right, but what are the other options? | ||
What he kept asking was he kept going like, OK, but if tariffs aren't the right answer, like what is the right answer? | ||
because obviously the economy in America is not... | ||
What is the solution if we want to reach reshore manufacturing? | ||
Like what is the process to do that if you aren't using tariffs like that? | ||
That is the it's good answer. | ||
It seems to be working already And it's just like man if right-wing Arguments are just given We're good to | ||
go. In an obligatory fashion, giving some side of the other argument. | ||
And it was like, I don't know how you can listen to that and not come away with being like, yeah, sounds like tariffs were actually a good idea. | ||
Sounds like there's a lot of positives. | ||
And the negatives are speculative, down the road, eventually, maybe prices will go up, but we don't know how much by how much like. | ||
And even their arguments against it were contradictory, where they're going, you know, this really, it really isn't even that big of a deal because America only imports 10% of the stuff that we buy. | ||
So it's like, okay, so what's the problem? | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
If we only import 10% of stuff, then tariffs are only on 10% of our stuff. | ||
Then they're like, oh, well, actually, if you think about it, 10%, if you raise price on 10% of products, that actually is really bad. | ||
And it's like, all right. | ||
So there aren't important, you know, they're not impactful because we only import 10% of stuff. | ||
The narrative that we import everything that's wrong. | ||
We only import 10% of the stuff. | ||
But also, it's really bad because 10% is actually really high, and if you raise price on 10% of stuff, it's gonna make everything more expensive. | ||
And it's like, you have nothing. | ||
These people just have nothing. | ||
Their arguments are internally inconsistent. | ||
They're contradictory with the other arguments that they make. | ||
Everything's speculative. | ||
They lose. | ||
When you put leftist ideas against right-wing ideas, if you allow them both to be aired, the right-wing ones come out on top every single time. | ||
It's why censorship is necessary for the left. | ||
Why Twitter had to be censored, it's why Facebook had to be censored, and it's why all of the uncensored platforms on the internet are right-wing, every one of them. | ||
They free up, you know, they get rid of the restrictions on X, it becomes right-wing. | ||
You go to 4chan where there's no control at all, it's as right-wing as you can possibly get. | ||
There's almost like an inverted, you know, relationship where it's like, the more censorship, the more left-wing, the less censorship, the more right-wing. | ||
So you get to the point where like, When you have no censorship at all, it's as right wing as you can possibly get. | ||
And so they have nothing. | ||
So they have nothing to argue about when it comes to tariffs because they're being implemented correctly. | ||
They're being implemented and applied appropriately to countries that have already that already tariff us to a massive degree. | ||
And there's not really an argument against it other than Price is going up, which like, okay. | ||
So basically we have two options. | ||
One option that we've been living with has been massive and continual inflation and no tariffs, or you can have the same inflation, but also tariffs where you're actually benefiting the American people and driving manufacturing back home. | ||
So it's not like. | ||
Not doing tariffs means we have no inflation. | ||
We've had awful inflation and no tariffs for a while. | ||
So these things are Not as closely related as as some people would want you to believe I Should I should have just brought I should just brought in the NPR Recording but I'm striving so I couldn't bring it in but it was so fascinating hearing the NPR person being like well, you know Nissan is building a giant steel mill. | ||
They just announced this giant steel mill and You know, this other company just announced this giant thing, like, so it is kind of working. | ||
You do have to acknowledge it's working. | ||
I mean, what's your response to that? | ||
And again, it's like, you could tell he didn't want to be making these arguments. | ||
unidentified
|
Nissan is creating a steel mill. | |
Who is? | ||
Well, Nissan is creating a steel mill. | ||
Nissan is creating a steel mill. | ||
What's your comment on that? | ||
And the guy's answer to that was just like, Well, that was already going to happen. | ||
They're just announcing it now, but these things have, it was, it's not because of the tariffs. | ||
So these were already in place. | ||
And it's like, you go look at the announcements and it's like, because of Donald Trump's economic policies, we are now moving our factory to Nebraska or wherever. | ||
So they just have nothing. | ||
They have to just like pretend that the stuff that is happening is not happening. | ||
They have to speculate about things that could potentially happen, but won't. | ||
And they have absolutely nothing. | ||
But still, they're, um, Very angry. | ||
Let's go to we got a couple videos on this topic. | ||
Of course, Donald Trump has responded to some of this In a way that only Trump has he responds China played it wrong. | ||
They panicked the one thing they cannot afford to do You can just tell Trump's just having the time of his life. | ||
Trump's just having a good time and is Knows that what he's doing is working mostly because The globalists are panicking. | ||
The Chinese are panicking and the Europeans are panicking. | ||
Let's go to clip number six here. | ||
This is Ursula van der Leyen, the head of the EU, panicking about Donald Trump's tariffs. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
The global economy will massively suffer. | |
Uncertainty will spiral and trigger the rise of further protectionism. | ||
The consequences will be dire for millions of people around the globe. | ||
The consequences will be dire for millions of people around the globe. | ||
Well, it's Thursday evening and the markets have closed. | ||
Tech stocks down about 10%. | ||
Overall, Dow Jones Industrial stocks down a little bit below 4%. | ||
This is about what I expected, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
America has been held hostage for 50 plus years by the globalists. | ||
We've been de-industrialized. | ||
The world has been raping us. | ||
Big corporations that negotiated these deals with China and others have manipulated our government on record to set up these sweetheart deals. | ||
And President Trump understands we don't have sovereignty, we don't have national security, we don't have national pride if he didn't make this big bet that he's been talking about for 30, 40, 50 years in interviews with Oprah Winfrey and others. | ||
I found interviews back in the late 70s of him talking about this. | ||
So here's what's happening. | ||
The globalists are trying to hold us hostage. | ||
Ever since he got in 73 days ago, they've taken over $3 trillion out of the U.S. stock market and put it in the EU. | ||
Trying to crash the market to blame him. | ||
But it didn't work. | ||
Yes, we were already due for a recession. | ||
He was handed a disaster. | ||
This is the type of reset we need to rebuild. | ||
But already, over $8 trillion has been pledged to the U.S. Over $3 trillion has already flooded back in, in real manufacturing. | ||
He's absolutely dominating. | ||
Everything Trump's doing is absolutely correct. | ||
That video, of course, you can find on Alex's ex, at RealAlexJones, where he breaks down the globalist panic. | ||
But again, you know, this stuff is undeniable, and the excuses that are being made are ridiculous. | ||
Again, as I was listening to NPR yesterday, the NPR reporter is like, yeah, I seem to remember somebody from Texas running for president in the early 90s, and he talked about a giant sucking sound from NAFTA. | ||
And it seemed like that was correct. | ||
It seemed like he was right. | ||
It seemed like when Ross Perot was describing the giant sucking sound of jobs being stripped away from America under NAFTA, it seems like he was right, wasn't he? | ||
And then the guy's interviewing, he's like, no, no, no, that never happened. | ||
It's like, yes, it did. | ||
No, but it did, though. | ||
No, we all saw it happen. | ||
No, we're all living in the You know, decayed, rusted ruins of the world that NAFTA destroyed, the Rust Belt, the giant factories that now sit abandoned and empty because they were offshored. | ||
You can't deny this was happening, but they are. | ||
They're denying it. | ||
They're saying, this guy was saying, actually, several studies have been done, and that's like the liberal code word. | ||
Studies have been done to show blah, blah, blah. | ||
You can have studies to show just about anything if you, you know, it's like they say statistics never lie, but liars use statistics. | ||
Studies are like statistics pre-packaged for deception. | ||
He says studies, several studies have shown that actually what drove away jobs in America was technological advancements. | ||
It's like, no, that's not true. | ||
That doesn't even remotely make sense. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
It doesn't even make sense. | ||
On the face of it. | ||
So there's a car manufacturing plant in America. | ||
And then a technological advance occurs. | ||
And then what? | ||
They just stopped making those cars? | ||
They stopped making cars? | ||
No, they offshored it to Mexico. | ||
They just built a new factory in Mexico where they could pay people half as much. | ||
And that's what they do now. | ||
It's the same technology. | ||
There's no technological advancement that suddenly made it impossible to make cars in America, or infeasible to make cars in America. | ||
This is a ridiculous argument, but that's the argument that's being made. | ||
No, it wasn't NAFTA that destroyed American industry. | ||
It was technological advancements. | ||
Like, really? | ||
Because in Maine, they're already firing up lumber mills that were shut down because of NAFTA. | ||
We used to get timber from Canada. | ||
Now, with the tariffs, That's more expensive. | ||
So already, they're already reopening mills in Maine and other places in the Northeast to process lumber because it's more expensive now than getting it from Canada. | ||
So where's the technology there? | ||
Where was their new saw technology that made these mills shut down? | ||
This is ridiculous. | ||
Now, the people that told you before, hey, if you sign NAFTA, you're going to, you know, all of our jobs are going to go away. | ||
And then they signed NAFTA and then all the jobs went away. | ||
Because it's all exactly as predicted. | ||
Let's go to one more video here about these tariffs. | ||
Clip number one. | ||
70 of the F-150 parts are sourced outside the U.S. So Ford, while it's an American car, it's made with parts from other countries. | ||
But they're embracing the patriotism behind these decisions and making some positive changes to deal with these Higher tariffs. | ||
Let's go to clip number one. | ||
unidentified
|
Couple of months, we're going to offer our customers the same deal that our employees get. | |
And as you say, that's worth thousands of dollars. | ||
You come into our store, you get employee pricing. | ||
This is kind of to call a little bit of a timeout. | ||
We've heard some some uncertainty from our customers and we want we want them to be assured that Ford, the most American auto company, is going to do right by them as our dealers. | ||
Ford is now offering employee pricing We're good to go. | ||
Ford is now offering employee pricing on their actually providing their customers discounts to deal with the tariffs because they're embarrassed. | ||
That's the fact. | ||
They're embarrassed that their car prices are having to go up because they don't make their cars in America or don't get their parts in America. | ||
While Japanese company Toyota does. | ||
So, you know, Toyotas that are built here, big giant, you know, Texas factory of Toyotas, their prices aren't going up. | ||
Because they're not subject to tariffs. | ||
Ford is because they offshored their plants. | ||
So now they're having to give discounts in an effort to be like, no, we're patriotic, trust us. | ||
No, we want what's best for America. | ||
See, we're so generous. | ||
We're giving you these discounts. | ||
It's like you're only having to give those discounts because you sold out our birthright. | ||
Because you went to a different country to use slave labor so you could line your pockets and disadvantage America. | ||
So you shouldn't have done that. | ||
Then you wouldn't be in this position. | ||
You should have just paid fair prices like your founder would have. | ||
Ford Motor Company will offer employee prices. | ||
Great. That's good. | ||
That's how it should be. | ||
That's how it should be. | ||
Trump's tariffs are already having the effect of forcing companies to prioritize Americans. | ||
Actually, if the bare minimum signal to Americans that we're on your side, we're not just trying to exploit and deprive you. | ||
I think it's really a powerful stuff. | ||
I was just trying to see if we had any other videos about this. | ||
I don't think we do, though. | ||
We have some other great videos to get to. | ||
But this is the story that was just delivered to me, but this isn't really a new story. | ||
But it's going viral. | ||
Founder Klaus Schwab to step down as World Economic Forum's chair. | ||
But you remember they tried to oust Klaus Schwab a couple months ago, and he like refused to step down But he hinted that he would be stepping down World Economic Forum founder Klaus Schwab quote will start the process of stepping down as chair of its board of trustees a spokesperson for the Geneva based institution told Reuters on Thursday Schwab said the forum which convenes annual gatherings in the Swiss resort of Davos I Did it just cracks me up that this thing exists? | ||
unidentified
|
It's like, yes, we get the world's leaders to gather in this town in Switzerland to set the world policies. | |
It's just like, how is this possible? | ||
How has James Bond not killed you all yet? | ||
You absolute villains. | ||
It's just hilarious that this just went on for so long, and they denied its mere existence, and now they're just like, no, actually, we acknowledge it's happening, and it's normal and good. | ||
Like, no. | ||
Now, there is a reason you kept this secret for so long, because on the face of it, It's freaking weird. | ||
It's bizarre that there's this bald German Nazi gathering everybody together to set the world's policies in a chateau in Switzerland. | ||
And I'm not just calling him a Nazi because it's a convenient watchword. | ||
I'm calling him a Nazi because his father owned a factory in Nazi Germany that used Jewish slave labor and that's how he got his wealth. | ||
Just like Ursula van der Leyen, just like George Soros. | ||
I know they're Jewish, they're also literally Nazis. | ||
People will point to that and they'll go, they're trying to distract from it. | ||
It's like, no, no, y'all, we're not just being like, well, they're the real Nazis. | ||
Leftists are the real racists. | ||
It's like, no, we're not being hyperbolic. | ||
I'm being very literal. | ||
These people are all literally Nazis, or their families literally got rich under the Nazis. | ||
And now they gather together on a mountaintop in Switzerland, unelected, nobody chose them, they're self-appointed to go be our leaders. | ||
Thanks, but no thanks. | ||
They convene annual gatherings in the Swiss resort of Davos, must recover its sense of mission after a period of turmoil. | ||
unidentified
|
We must re-establish our sense of mission. | |
It's like, you know, their sense of mission is never diminished. | ||
They are still rabidly dedicated to themselves. | ||
They are still just as driven to enslave the world under their soft power of financial manipulation. | ||
unidentified
|
It's literally pinky in the brain. | |
Like, literally, they all get together and they're like, what are we going to do this year? | ||
What are we going to do this year, Klaus? | ||
Take over the world! | ||
Same thing we do every year. | ||
Noah, Harari, try to take over the world! | ||
And yeah, they failed. | ||
They're losing. | ||
They're what you might call the Bernie Sanders of the global conglomerates. | ||
L after L after L. And they have to pretend that actually they're It's actually them. | ||
Actually, they're like, we have to rededicate ourselves to this mission. | ||
Like, no, you've never dropped the dedication to your mission. | ||
It's just we all found out who you are. | ||
People start listening to InfoWars and finding out who you people are and what you really believe and how you really gained your power and what significance or importance or validity you people actually have. | ||
You've been uncovered. | ||
You've been discovered. | ||
You've been undone. | ||
And now you're panicking. | ||
Now you're trying to re-establish control in a world that is now aware of your movements. | ||
So paint it however you want, WEF. | ||
We have your number. | ||
And you're screwed. | ||
Chwab will remain in his role until a successor is appointed, the WEF spokesperson told Reuters without providing a timeline. | ||
Well, here's my takeaway from this. | ||
Here's my takeaway. | ||
First of all, Unlike Kamala Harris, I love listening to Klaus Schwab. | ||
I could listen to his voice all day, every day. | ||
It's the different evil voice. | ||
There's two evil voices out there. | ||
There's the Dolores Umbridge Kamala Harris tackling witch voice. | ||
And then there's the Bond villain voice. | ||
I like the Bond villain voice. | ||
I love hearing Klaus Schwab. | ||
unidentified
|
Talk about eating some bugs, the false industrial revolution. | |
Because it's so perfect. | ||
It's so typical. | ||
It's so... | ||
He's a stereotype of an evil villain. | ||
And I love how accurately he fulfills that role. | ||
So first, I'm gonna miss him. | ||
I'm gonna miss him. | ||
I'm gonna miss that crazy old coot. | ||
That cartoon villain. | ||
Kissinger understudy. | ||
But my other suggestion to the World Economic Forum, if you're looking for a leader, oh, I'm available. | ||
I'm very available. | ||
If Klaus Schwab needs a successor, I'm here and we will lead the World Economic Forum into new and glorious fields. | ||
Give me the WEF. | ||
We'll really change the world. | ||
Welcome back ladies and gentlemen. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome to the world outside of the cave, to the real world outside of the matrix. | |
We're going to go now to a video from Glenn Beck. | ||
He's come a long way since he was bringing himself in Cheeto dust to oppose Trump. | ||
He was always a smart guy. | ||
He always did pretty good work. | ||
He just, like so many others, took him a little longer than others to break out of the Mental chains keeping him enthralled to the status quo and the establishment as it is. | ||
Here he is laying out just some of the suspicious connections, really inexplicable connections between Judge Boasberg and all of the bizarre legal decisions made during Trump's administration. | ||
Here's Glenn Beck clip number five. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
So let's take a look at some of these Democratic-appointed federal judges who are playing whack-a-mole with Trump's agenda. | ||
Let's start with Judge James Boasberg. | ||
What a guy. | ||
Picked by Obama back in 2016. | ||
He served on the FISA court, where he approved four applications related to the Russia collusion hoax. | ||
He's the guy that signed off on all of that. | ||
And then later, when the former FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith Okay, I think I'm starting to see who you are. | ||
Let me see if I can clarify and zoom in a little bit more. | ||
Next, we have Anna Reyes. | ||
She's another D.C. District Court judge. | ||
She was also appointed by Joe Biden. | ||
She's the judge that halted Trump's ban on transgender troops in the military. | ||
In 2020, she also volunteered her legal services to Biden's campaign. | ||
Since 2008, she donated over $38,000 to Democrats, including maxing out on the contributions to Biden in 2020. | ||
I wonder how she got her job. | ||
And then she's also been associated with a buffet of left-wing activist groups. | ||
Pro-abortion, pro-illegal immigration, pro-DEI, you name it, that's her. | ||
Then there's the U.S. District Court Judge Theodore Chang, another Obama appointee. | ||
Now, he's the one trying to reverse Trump's shutdown of USAID, which folks are just so passionate about, right? | ||
He also has a long history of donating to the Democratic Party candidates and causes, including Obama and John Kerry presidential campaigns, okay? | ||
But back in 2017, he was the first judge to block Donald Trump's travel ban on several Muslim-majority countries. | ||
He said that was just horrific. | ||
In 2020, he also issued the injunction against Trump and the administration's FDA rule that abortion drugs have to be picked up in person, can't be received by mail. | ||
That's just outrageous and unconstitutional. | ||
Where? And again, that's just barely scratching the surface. | ||
The secret resistance is the series Glenn Beck is putting out. | ||
Here's who's funding the judicial coup against Trump. | ||
I still just can't get over the numbers that we went over earlier this week where a third of the judges are foreign-born. | ||
And every single one of them was a literal leftist activist with bare minimum legal training, never had an experience as a judge, never wore the robe before being appointed to the court where they can apparently sign FISA warrants and block Donald Trump's agenda at every pass. | ||
They're not judges, they're activists. | ||
They're political appointed activists who are there for the purpose of shutting down Donald Trump and they're doing it in cooperation With the NGOs and other legal outlets that are coordinating with them to file cases to stop Trump's agenda to prevent the resurrection of America and the rebirth of American greatness. | ||
And intolerable, we can't allow this to go on. | ||
We have to remove these people and punish them for their crimes. | ||
Yes, the judges. | ||
Coming to you live this Friday morning. | ||
Let me go ahead and open up the phone lines right now and then I got a couple more videos to show you this segment. | ||
The number to dial if you want to call into the American Journal this morning is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
That's 1-877-789-2539. | ||
Taking your calls now. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
This video just dropped from Alex Jones. | ||
He's in the studio next door, but responding to the announcement, stepping down of World Economic Forum kingpin Klaus Schwab. | ||
What is he going to do with his retirement? | ||
If you said upload his consciousness into a mainframe and die, that's accurate. | ||
That's what he's going to do. | ||
I'm sure. | ||
I know, you know, people like this. | ||
They don't stop what they're doing. | ||
Their lives are consumed by ambition for power and control. | ||
They genuinely don't have fun, just like hanging out with their family, sitting on a fishing boat all day. | ||
Simple pleasures are inaccessible to them. | ||
They only really feel happy when dominating or controlling Or making other people miserable. | ||
Because they're miserable people themselves. | ||
Yeah, there he is. | ||
That's what he'll be doing. | ||
unidentified
|
In here, I'm still in charge. | |
In the virtual world, people like me. | ||
People respect me and I'm still in charge of the World Economic Forum. | ||
I have a VR headset where I put it on and attend pretend symposium where people cheer me. | ||
I'm good-looking in here, too? | ||
Better for him. | ||
Good. It's good. | ||
No, Klaus, you're still in charge of the World Economic Forum. | ||
For sure. | ||
Put the headset on. | ||
unidentified
|
Uh-huh. | |
That's the real world. | ||
Go in there. | ||
unidentified
|
All of my robot friends are here. | |
And Mark Zuckerberg, too. | ||
unidentified
|
Come on, Mark. | |
Let's poison everyone with a vaccine. | ||
Klaus Schwab enjoying his retirement. | ||
unidentified
|
This is so fun. | |
I'm having so much fun right now. | ||
Here's Alex Jones responding to the announcement that Klaus Schwab is stepping down from the World Economic Forum. | ||
Henry Kissinger, protege, and Bilderberg Group frontman Klaus Schwab about six months ago stepped down as the head of the World Economic Forum that was made two years ago co-equal with the UN by the UN. | ||
Think about that. | ||
Unelected group in the tyrannical UN. | ||
But now he's officially resigned completely from the World Economic Forum after hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars of U.S. aid and other U.S. government money was cut off from the group by President Trump, Elon Musk activity at Doge. | ||
So this is a big, big deal. | ||
We don't have the exact numbers, but it's close to a trillion stolen dollars they've already found. | ||
They found more. | ||
That was a corporate media lie that Musk is leaving Doge. | ||
This is a real revolution against the globalists, and the biggest thing Trump can do is cut their money off, and that is what is happening. | ||
This is an incredible time to be alive. | ||
The World Economic Forum literally wants to collapse the world economy, consolidate control of BlackRock, so they can dictate a global social credit score and universal basic income to everybody. | ||
They want a world currency, central bank digital currency. | ||
They literally want you to eat bugs. | ||
They want you to take microchips to buy and sell. | ||
They want forced injections. | ||
They penetrate the cabinets of our governments and set up their UN puppets. | ||
So this is really another giant indicator of the collapse and rout of the New World Order and their whole anti-human, transhumanist, death cult system collapsing. | ||
And there are new alliances and new systems forming. | ||
But just like 27 years after World War II, they found the last Japanese soldier on an island where he'd been dumped off. | ||
When the Japanese were evacuating out of the South Pacific back to Japan, and they were told to stay and fight, he was shooting at people's boats and stuff as they came by, and he didn't know that Japan had surrendered 20-plus years before. | ||
So the left doesn't understand. | ||
They're like headless horsemen or headless chickens, running around, burning up Tesla things and beating people up, and just running around, acting like complete psychos, because they thought they'd get all this free stuff. | ||
They thought they were going to have this big giant heaven and they were going to be put in charge or they would be free. | ||
But their globalist system is dead on arrival. | ||
And the quicker they surrender from attacking everybody and just have prosperity and freedom, the better. | ||
This is really, really good news. | ||
We're winning major battles. | ||
We haven't won the war yet. | ||
I'll be on the air at 11 a.m. | ||
Central today at InfoWars.com forward slash show. | ||
And right here on X-Rail Ox Jones with all these massive developments and more. | ||
Please join me. | ||
And remember, you're the Paul Revere's. | ||
Share that live feed. | ||
The globalist hope you don't. | ||
You know, it is worth it to Like like genuinely take a moment to like appreciate our victory our victories are the Absolutely incredible. | ||
I mean just like You know appreciating really soaking in understanding the fact that We don't have to listen to Kamala Harris be our president Like just if you're feeling bad today if things aren't going your way just close your eyes and just go At least Kamala is not president. | ||
At least I don't have to listen to her. | ||
At least I don't have to hear her. | ||
At least every day we wake up with Donald Trump as president. | ||
The sun is shining. | ||
The birds are chirping. | ||
Kamala Harris is drunk somewhere making a fool out of herself and we don't have to hear about it. | ||
We don't have to contend with it. | ||
We don't have to hear it. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
It really is amazing. | ||
And it really is amazing. | ||
That the January Sixers got out it really is amazing that Trump is literally shattering the global economic order that has systematically Deprived the American people and left us destitute It's all been upended. | ||
This is I mean we are living through the culmination of all of these These energies That have been formulating over decades the the movement that Alex Jones has led through InfoWars that combines, | ||
you know health and and you know testosterone and you know all these concerns about the poisoning of our food and water and and our bodies and minds being destroyed on purpose to make us more malleable and controllable the the the anti-globalist push that until you know 2015 you had to listen InfoWars to hear about Suddenly Donald Trump comes on the stage. | ||
Not only does he bring awareness to the reality of the situation, he is now in a position and has gone through the gauntlet of leftist torture that has left him hard-hearted and willing to take these big risks. | ||
The World Economic Forum is collapsing, admitting that they've lost completely. | ||
The Democratic Party is shattered. | ||
To almost an irreparable degree. | ||
I mean we have won so powerfully That we really got to like take a moment to like realize where we are realize the success that we've had Not by any means retire on this not by any means Lay back and and act like we've won the final battle There's still a lot of fighting to come and so it's only gonna get more dangerous and more Crazy as time goes on But | ||
that's because our enemies are backed into the corner and flailing and desperate and losing they are losing they're in retreat We are pursuing them But like any like any real war, you know, this is the time When we are most vulnerable and things are most dangerous now, I want to go out to your phone calls I know the first Uh, person to call in was Willie in California wants to talk about the Tesla burning. | ||
Before we go out to that phone call, let's go to this video because this was just posted by Elon Musk. | ||
Uh, saying, saying he agrees with this. | ||
I don't know exactly what it is, but it's clip number 10. Police claim terrorist is a victim of Democrat incitement. | ||
They were inspired to attack a Tesla because of Democratic leaders. | ||
This video was reposted by Elon Musk just minutes ago. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
Bloomington Chief Hodges here. | |
I showed you this video last week of this person scratching his Tesla. | ||
And like SpongeBob said here, thanks to everybody's help, we were able to identify them. | ||
The suspect here is a woman in their late 20s. | ||
They turned themselves in. | ||
They were brought in with their family. | ||
They've been fully cooperative. | ||
The victim in this case, Just wanted their car fixed and they just wanted the suspect to pay for that Based on the totality of the circumstances here and along with our core value of being compassion compassionate This is the best outcome For everybody involved in this case, but let me be clear here in Bloomington. | ||
You probably have never heard me utter these words The suspect in this case may have been a victim And I mean victim in terms of the rhetoric that is being spewed out here by some of those in leadership. | ||
We need our leaders to start leading and stop feeding this rhetoric. | ||
People should be able to drive whatever car they want without fear of going into a store and someone Scratching their car or people yelling at them because of the car that they start that they choose to drive It's time for all of us, you know Just start getting along and knock this stuff off man People should be able to be left alone, but rest assured if you damage these cars or target people We are going to arrest you. | ||
We are going to prosecute you to the fullest extent that we're able to But in this case, I'm gonna go back to Based on the totality of everything with it and our core value of being compassionate and ultimately what the victim in this case wanted because the victim in this case is the most important. | ||
This is the best outcome. | ||
The victim has already been made whole in terms of being paid and the suspect in this case we're going to hold those charges over their head just to ensure that they don't do anything similar to this. | ||
Um, in the near future. | ||
So with that, Bloomington, we will see you back here later on this week where I'm going to talk about some of the property damage to vehicles that's taken place on the east side of Bloomington. | ||
See you back here later this week. | ||
Wow. Yeah. | ||
Very, very powerful stuff. | ||
Now it's true. | ||
These people are being radicalized and incited by their democratic leadership and in a way they are victims because it's so petulant. | ||
It's so childish. | ||
Scratching a car and it's like you're gonna go to jail for 20 years for that? | ||
Is that worth it? | ||
Like, just don't do that. | ||
It ain't worth it, y'all. | ||
People are so, like, 20 years for... | ||
5 years for putting gum on someone's car? | ||
It's like, well... | ||
You want to charge people with felonies for driving over a crosswalk you painted rainbow, so... | ||
I guess the first response to this argument is shut up. | ||
Shut up. | ||
Just shut up. | ||
You've made your bed. | ||
Time to get screwed in it, right? | ||
I mean, you've set the standard here. | ||
And frankly, we're being merciful to you. | ||
So shut up first of all. | ||
Conversation over, actually, at that point. | ||
But the next thing is, yeah, you're actually damaging people's personal property. | ||
Stuff they work really hard for. | ||
Yeah, you're gonna go to jail. | ||
Sorry. Sorry! | ||
Dumbass. Don't hurt people's property. | ||
Problem solved. | ||
Willie in California, what's your take on this? | ||
Tesla's burning. | ||
What should Elon be doing? | ||
It's amazing, Harrison. | ||
Good morning. | ||
And the patience that Elon has. | ||
when is he going to go rogue and go back and dig into all the profiles and DMS on X and expose everything and everybody. | ||
He obviously has got the receipts buried in the platforms. | ||
Yeah! And these Tesla owners having to make excuses trying to avoid the vandalism, all the while he's doing more work with a small team to save America than all members of Congress combined. | ||
He's got enough evidence that's worthy of becoming proof in a court of law, but even if we can't corral a neutral judge to adjudicate the corruption, we still must expose the fraud. | ||
The only justice we may see might be found in the court of public That's such a good point. | ||
And I mean, we know the left does that. | ||
I remember all the way back in like, must have been 2017 or something, talking to Roger Stone about, you know, how his DMs ended up either in a court case or in something else. | ||
And it's like, yeah, the people at Twitter have access to your DMs. | ||
You know that, right? | ||
Like nothing you do on one of these social media companies is private at all. | ||
I mean, even the ones that are supposed to be private, even like, you know, the Alexa or the Google whatever that's sitting in your house, that's listening to you all the time and people are hearing it. | ||
Like, like workers at Google are listening to your recordings, try to, you know, verify if it was accurate or whatever. | ||
So, I mean, there is no privacy on the internet at all. | ||
Twitter, the Twitter company has access to your DMs. | ||
It has access to your private messages. | ||
It has access to all of that stuff, all the deleted tweets. | ||
So you're absolutely right. | ||
I guarantee you there is a Overabundance of evidence on the Twitter servers if if they chose to go the route the leftists You know have chosen to go recently And there's one of the things that you know, | ||
there's a rumor going around that Elon Musk was going to be stepping down Apparently the latest I've heard is that he'll be sort of not doing as much doge stuff instead He'll be just an advisor to the president But all of that is still kind of rumor, and it's been denied by some of the Trump administration. | ||
When I heard it, I was kind of like, I felt good for Elon. | ||
I was like, yeah, he probably should, you know, he can probably focus on some other stuff for a little bit, let the Doge team run its course, do its thing. | ||
But, you know, he is under a lot of pressure, and he seems to be burning the candle at both ends. | ||
I'm not complaining. | ||
I'm not complaining. | ||
He's been doing so much for this country. | ||
It really is incredible. | ||
Thanks so much for the call, Willie. | ||
Let's go to Tim in Philly. | ||
Tim in Philadelphia. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
How are you, Harrison? | |
Good. Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Good. Listen, I just want to thank you for your wit and the belly laugh I got today and putting my regains on. | |
What a great patriot. | ||
I'll tell you, between you and Chase and Owen, You guys are the future, man. | ||
You guys are the future of this country. | ||
I got some words for you. | ||
Four words, four words. | ||
Manifest destiny for a silhouetted NPC with an exploding eyeball. | ||
But I want to thank you for what you do, and you give me hope for the future. | ||
All right. | ||
Well, thank you, Tim. | ||
We're doing it. | ||
We are manifesting our destiny as we speak. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks, brother. | |
Well, thank you. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
And look, you know, we're in this weird position where it's like we're winning, but things are getting more dangerous. | ||
We're, you know, in charge, but our enemies still have incredible power. | ||
We're both like, you know, under massive threat, but needing to push forward. | ||
It's like, you know, we got to keep our heads up. | ||
We got to, you know, celebrate our victories. | ||
We have to, because it's all about morale at the end of the day. | ||
You got to keep your morale up. | ||
And that's why we're winning. | ||
And actually, this is something I meant to bring up with Myron Gaines, but maybe I'll just show the video. | ||
My friend sent this video and it's Charlie Kirk and he's been, if you've been on YouTube recently, I don't know, if you have my algorithm, you see these videos practically every commercial break. | ||
And it's Charlie Kirk talking to college students. | ||
He's been doing this thing where he goes and sets up a table and there's a microphone and people come up one by one to sort of debate with him. | ||
And it's fascinating because There is a palpable shift in attitude from the left. | ||
And in this particular clip, he's talking to a woman about abortion and he basically proves her wrong. | ||
He sort of catches her in a logical fallacy or sort of he gets her to admit something that she shouldn't admit. | ||
He basically asks like, well, is abortion for any reason good? | ||
And she's like, yeah, of course. | ||
And he's like, okay, so if a woman She learns that her child, the baby she's carrying is a girl and she doesn't want a girl. | ||
Is it okay to kill that child because she doesn't want a girl? | ||
And the girl's like, yeah, that's fine. | ||
And everybody in the crowd is just like, what? | ||
Everybody's like, murderer! | ||
Like, oh my God! | ||
And after a few minutes, she backs it up and she goes, okay, you know, I was wrong. | ||
I was wrong. | ||
I was, I took it too far. | ||
You're right. | ||
That was bad. | ||
I need to think about some things. | ||
And you know, my friend sent this to me being like, what is happening? | ||
What is happening? | ||
When have you ever seen a leftist admit they were wrong and be and say, I stand corrected and change their views like this is crazy. | ||
And I think it's I think it's because the left finally has, you know, understands what's going on and goes and is worried now about being cringe. | ||
They don't want to be cringe. | ||
They don't want to end up in a compilation being the idiot leftist. | ||
They're against a misogynist. | ||
Like they get it now. | ||
They finally get like, oh, that's not a good look. | ||
That's not. | ||
And you still get them. | ||
They're still out there. | ||
They're still the leftist who will shriek and scream and cry and make fools out of themselves. | ||
They're still out there. | ||
But like, it's not like it was before. | ||
It's not. | ||
You don't have as many. | ||
We have a dichotomy. | ||
You have like the leftist that are radicalized or even more radicalized or even more crazy. | ||
They're even more insane. | ||
But but the ones that are just sort of your brainwash. | ||
Leftist normie They're like not as crazy as they used to be and I think at least part of it is like understanding like okay the culture is shifting I'm not gonna get cheered and be celebrated by being an obnoxious Moron anymore, so I got it. | ||
I got at least act like Reasonable because they actually understand now they're like, oh, we're losing the argument. | ||
We have to change our argumentation style We have to not be the overbearing condescending screeching freaks anymore We have to at least pretend to be reasonable so we aren't driving everybody away so there's like a major shift happening right now and that and that is brilliant and amazing and good and it's because we have just consistently pushed and and Like like We haven't become them. | ||
We haven't become the left. | ||
We haven't resorted to their tactics. | ||
We are still operating on a moral playing field with principled stances. | ||
It was tough for a while, but we finally, I think, made it through the most difficult part of this combat. | ||
And now the tide has turned in our favor, and we're going to see more and more Leftists being unwilling to, you know, hold these ridiculous stances, at least in public, because they realize that, like, normies are waking up. | ||
The average person now realizes how suicidally deranged the left is, and they're having to tamp down their more, you know, outrageous expressions. | ||
So this is amazing. | ||
This is amazing. | ||
This is good. | ||
And this is what we've been going for the whole time, which is why, you know, we want to celebrate this stuff. | ||
Yeah, I appreciate the kind words and just know like everything we do here is strategic. | ||
It's designed to win the war on your mind. | ||
That's why it's our saying, right? | ||
There's a war on for your mind and we intend to win it. | ||
And you're seeing the victory commence. | ||
Let's go to Robert in Florida. | ||
Want to talk about tariffs and income tax. | ||
One minute left in the segment. | ||
The floor is yours, Robert. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
I just want to talk about an ROE, Reclamation of Election, a form that you can fill out to take yourself out of paying income tax. | |
The tariffs are going to be probably a good thing, but people need to research and study this. | ||
It takes about a month or so. | ||
It's about a 60-page form. | ||
Where do they get the form? | ||
ROE. Where do they get it? | ||
unidentified
|
You can print it down offline or you can pay $1,500 and there are people that will help you fill the form out and submit it and you will never pay taxes, federal taxes or anything. | |
Wow. Well, certainly something to look into. | ||
I, for one, am not going to give advice like that so people can't sue me later, but certainly something worth looking into if you want my advice, my non-legal advice. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back, folks. | |
Man, how good are our graphics? | ||
Please support this crew and this show by going to thealexjonestore.com. | ||
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Support us and this crew and this operation. | ||
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There's a lot of news and more breaking every minute, it seems. | ||
I got a couple of just breaking things. | ||
First of all, the job numbers came in for March. | ||
The U.S. economy added 228,000 jobs last month, but the unemployment rate ticked up somehow. | ||
Economists expected the U.S. to add just 130,000 jobs in March, but we beat that prediction by nearly 100,000, making all of the doom and gloom about Trump's economic policies seem a little bit silly, | ||
considering the fact that as a major, major success, In terms of job growth, compared to the fake numbers given out by the Biden administration, we're constantly fraudulently inflated, only to be reversed later on. | ||
Meanwhile, the Canadian economy lost 33,000 jobs in March, the biggest loss since 2022, while the U.S. exceeded expectations. | ||
So, as Patrick Webb says, the U.S. beats Canada again. | ||
Big shocker. | ||
Big shocker there. | ||
But hey, it's good news for Canada because who would want a state like that in the Union, right? | ||
I mean, I don't know, the whole, let's make Canada the 51st state thing, a little less appealing now when we see the trajectory they're taking. | ||
So, hey, there's that. | ||
Hey, that's a silver cloud, silver lining to the cloud, isn't it? | ||
Meanwhile, Donald Trump just is going off on everybody. | ||
He's saying China's panicking, they're making a big mistake. | ||
And he absolutely went to bat for Marine Le Pen. | ||
Posting this on truth. | ||
The witch hunt against Marine Le Pen is another example of European leftists using lawfare to silence free speech and censor their political opponent. | ||
This time going so far as to put that opponent in prison. | ||
It's the same playbook that was used against me by a group of lunatics and losers like Norm Eisen, Andrew Wiseman, and Lisa Monaco. | ||
They spent the last nine years thinking of nothing else, and they failed because the people of the United States realized that they were only corrupt lawyers and politicians. | ||
I don't know Marine Le Pen, but I do appreciate how hard she worked for so many years. | ||
She suffered losses but kept going, and now, just before what could be a big victory, they get her on a minor charge that she probably knew nothing about. | ||
Sounds like a bookkeeping error to me. | ||
This is all so bad for France and the great French people, no matter what side they're on. | ||
Free Marine Le Pen. | ||
That's absolutely right. | ||
And again, Donald Trump is just, he's just going after all of all these networks, all these people, all of this sick stuff. | ||
He is targeting it and using American power and influence in the way it's supposed to be used to go after these corrupt networks, destroying real democracy around the globe. | ||
Real, you know, the real populist, Will of the people around the globe, especially in Europe, is being systematically denigrated and destroyed. | ||
And Donald Trump is standing up against it. | ||
This is a huge and powerful development on the world stage that has the European tyrants shaking in their boots. | ||
And we've heard other statements from Trump recently about things like Ofcom in Britain and Trump saying, hey, if you want free trade with us, You gotta have free speech for your people. | ||
Again, we should be using American prosperity and power to compel other countries to not subjugate their people. | ||
This is exactly what America's purpose in the world always was. | ||
We are literally manifesting our destiny as we speak, and it's incredible to see. | ||
And again, it's incredible to know that, like, if they just let Trump alone, none of this would be happening to them. | ||
They're getting exactly what they deserve. | ||
And it's beautiful. | ||
Let's go now to our phone calls. | ||
Jefferson in Virginia has called in about Dan Bongino, in particular this tweet where Dan Bongino says, just because you don't immediately see it doesn't mean it isn't happening. | ||
What do you think that means, Jefferson? | ||
You're on the air. | ||
I think it's 15 days to see the spread or something like that. | ||
It's trust the plan. | ||
Yeah. I hope it's something significant that's going to be announced, you know, shortly, but, uh, I think golf is getting in the way. | ||
All these guys are, uh, waiting until the masters is over. | ||
So I think we have to wait until April 15th before the, uh, the hammer comes down. | ||
we start seeing real announcements about what's going on behind the scenes. | ||
But, you know, Trump's down in Florida right now hosting that live event. | ||
And the Masters is next week. | ||
And Cash Patel is a big golf fan. | ||
So I'm not sure they want to rustle the feathers around D.C. | ||
until this sort of golf festival is over. | ||
So I think we got like 10 days before the real thing starts. | ||
What do you think he's talking about? | ||
I mean, Dan Bongino says just because you don't immediately see it doesn't mean it isn't happening. | ||
I mean, there's so many things he could be talking about. | ||
He could be talking about JFK. | ||
He could be talking about the Epstein files. | ||
He could be talking about the arrests of the criminals that we know. | ||
What do you think he's hinting at here? | ||
Well, I hope he's announcing eventually that with his direct line to the Trump White House sort of going around Pam Bondi, they can sort of compel her to finally initiate some sort of prosecution of somebody. | ||
They just have to pick out some particular high-profile person that we've all known as a criminal for so long, but nobody's prosecuting them and actually announce that they are going to be indicted and they need to be hauled before a judge, hopefully not a judge in D.C., but somewhere else. | ||
But as I say, I think it's all leading up to something that's going to take place in the middle of April rather than right away, and he's just sort of making people believe that hang on, hang in there, trust the plan, but I'm really going to get something done here. | ||
Maybe he is going to be thwarted. | ||
He thinks he's going to get something done, but Bongino's our best player. | ||
I'm not sure what Cash is doing. | ||
I hope he turns out to be what we think he is. | ||
But, uh, you know, Laura Loomer seems to be doing more than anybody else right now to get things done. | ||
It's amazing how many people she's getting kicked out of the administration by just vetting them right in front of the president. | ||
That's right. | ||
We haven't even really talked about that today. | ||
So Laura Loomer was at the White House yesterday and apparently was exposing to Trump, uh, She is tireless. | ||
I don't know where she gets her energy. | ||
She's making Bill Maher pay her for defamatory comments he made about her having sex with Trump, which wasn't true. | ||
And she's in California, but she's always on the job. | ||
She's now talking about some tranny that's working at the National Security Council that needs to be fired. | ||
She never gives up. | ||
She comes off as a little high-strung and nutty, but she's never given the time to sound like she's rational. | ||
People always rush her through her appearances on their shows. | ||
So she's always trying to get as much information as possible in the shortest amount of time. | ||
So she comes off as rather strident. | ||
But my goodness. | ||
She's a national asset. | ||
She is, man. | ||
She is. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
And I'll say, just from my experience with her, there you go, the crew's already playing the video. | ||
When I went with her to... | ||
Folks, I say this all the time. | ||
They know what I'm going to say. | ||
But I mean, I was there when she was holding this protest. | ||
I mean, it was her and two other people, right? | ||
It was her and basically her two friends that were helping her. | ||
And that was it. | ||
I mean, there's no big team behind Laura. | ||
There's no big, you know, group helping her out and getting and, you know, helping her to achieve this stuff. | ||
It is just her. | ||
And she is dogged and powerful. | ||
It's, you know, she's awesome. | ||
She is absolutely awesome. | ||
And I do think she's been treated unfairly by the Trump administration, wanting to distance themselves from her because of drama around her. | ||
That's not even her fault. | ||
It's things like this. | ||
Bill Maher, you know, defaming her and claiming, you know, sexual impropriety with Donald Trump. | ||
He's now being sued. | ||
buy her for that but it's that type of stuff that's kept her out of the inner circle when really i think she belongs there and look we can disagree on some things but at the end of the day she is a major asset and uh and really tireless in that in the pursuit of justice and and exposing lies so yeah powerful so i don't know how she does i mean some of these some of these people it's like i don't know how they do it it it's You know, miraculous if you can break one story. | ||
Savannah Hernandez has the same type of thing where it's like, she just goes and it's like, she breaks this story about Jackson Hewitt, you know, giving out flyers to illegal immigrants saying that he'd get a $14,000 tax return even if they're illegal and have never paid taxes. | ||
And it's like, how does this, how do some people, they just like, find these stories? | ||
And it's because they're dogged, because they don't give up, because they actually go out and investigate things and, you know, find information that nobody else has, and they're changing the world. | ||
Savannah has a niche because she's Hispanic appearance makes people think she's a leftist when she's on the street investigating stuff that's going on. | ||
She's undercover. | ||
She can sort of walk right in and these people just assume that she's on their side and she just asks intelligent questions and gets the documents. | ||
And they sort of hand it over and then go, oh, you got to give me that back. | ||
And it's too late. | ||
And that's hilarious what she's able to get done. | ||
I love Savannah. | ||
But there's just so many people doing all the right things. | ||
And they're just not getting the traction or remuneration that they deserve. | ||
They should be getting paid better for what they're doing. | ||
Maybe that'll change in the next couple of years that they'll become sort of media sensations that have more of a revenue stream. | ||
We're getting there gradually, but I think, as I say, I don't think that real hammer drops for another 10 days. | ||
We all got to be patient, but I am certainly sick of being patient. | ||
Absolutely, absolutely. | ||
And there's only so long. | ||
That's what I was saying before even Trump got into office. | ||
I was like, what's going to be our deadline, guys? | ||
Like, how long are we going to give Trump before we're going to start getting impatient? | ||
And we'll give him like six months. | ||
It's only been two or it's only been two or three. | ||
It's only been 74 or five days at this point. | ||
So maybe a hundred day mark and we'll really start, you know putting the pressure on but yeah, I I've been you know, sort of Impatient the entire time because I know how how short of a time we have to get so much done Thanks so much for that call Jefferson. | ||
Let's go now to Chris in California. | ||
Chris wants to talk about geoengineering fog Go ahead Chris. | ||
unidentified
|
You're on the air You know, what's up Harrison? | |
Hello from California. | ||
Hello So Mike Adams, health ranger, has been posting on X about how a lady supposedly collected a sample from the geoengineering fog that's been kind of, uh, people have been talking about. | ||
The fog that makes you sick, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, yeah. | |
You know what happened? | ||
Like the middle of winter and I woke up in the middle of the night and I was having like a, like a, felt like an allergic reaction. | ||
I was like, what's going on? | ||
It's no pollen. | ||
It's like December or November and I'm in the Bay Area and I'm used to seeing the fog come in, you know, off the ocean my whole life. | ||
And, uh, and yeah, so I had this weird experience with it. | ||
I was like, this is weird. | ||
Why do I have allergies right now? | ||
And then, uh, you know, I went to walk my dog later that day and it was still foggy. | ||
Through observation, it, it just looked weird. | ||
It looked like a, like floating up. | ||
It was just like this particles So anyways, Health Ranger says a lady collected just recently samples somehow, and he's got pictures online of like microchips, like 2,000 times magnification, like little microchips and these little organisms. | ||
So I'm like, holy shit, like what's going on here? | ||
So just put two and two together, observation and experience. | ||
And then now Health Ranger's got this information coming out. | ||
He's got some proof, I guess. | ||
Wow. Yeah, he says he'll release it today. | ||
So this is the tweet from Mike Adams at Health Ranger. | ||
Anybody want to tell me what you think this is? | ||
Why does it have parallel lines that connect like circuitry? | ||
I found the sample. | ||
I found this in the sample sent to me by Dr. | ||
Jane Ruvie, in which mysterious fog and chemtrail fallout was collected for about six months in Florida. | ||
This is 2,000 times magnification, major mass spec lab results results. | ||
We'll be announced here tomorrow. | ||
So yeah, they've actually been collecting samples of this fog and testing it and finding these mysterious microscopic creations in there. | ||
That's, that's fascinating stuff. | ||
I mean, what's your theory on this, Chris? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I actually, like I was saying, I, before anybody, it was like a week before anybody even said anything about the fog, maybe five days before anybody even brought it up. | |
I thought it was just weird. | ||
I was like, what the fuck is this? | ||
Right. And then, um... | ||
Sorry, I gotta ask you to watch your language there, Chris. | ||
unidentified
|
Sorry, sir. | |
Sorry about that. | ||
I got a potty mouth. | ||
And, uh, so just through experience, I thought it was weird. | ||
Kind of like when I think I had COVID in November of 2019, I was like, I woke up in the middle of the night, super sick. | ||
I was like, what's going on here? | ||
Man, I love Mike Adams, and it's sort of just in line with what we were just talking about with the previous caller. | ||
We have these incredible people on our side, and it's just like, what would we do without them? | ||
Whether it's these indefatigable women reporters, Brandon Morello and Laura Loomer and Savannah Hernandez going out and getting these major stories, or people like Mike Adams with this incredible lab able to test this stuff. | ||
I mean, we are and have been and continue to build this, you know, conservative news ecosystem that is incredibly powerful. | ||
This is, yeah, I remember when he invited me in to observe this. | ||
I will never forget. | ||
I mean, the video does not do it justice. | ||
When you see, you know, Mike Adams handling this material, it is It is creepy, but you know, it's like what would we do without somebody with the scientific knowledge? | ||
And I mean, he's a real scientist with all the equipment, with all the, you know, spectrometers and testing equipment. | ||
I mean, he really runs an amazing operation. | ||
So I guess he'll be coming out today with the results of some of his studies. | ||
Thank you so much for that call. | ||
Chris, I do want to get to a few more here, but weird, weird fog that smells like chemicals and makes you sick and apparently has some sort of biomedical It's crazy but it's true. | ||
Let's go to Aaron in Braintree at Braintree Studios now. | ||
Aaron, thanks so much for calling in, sir. | ||
How are you? | ||
unidentified
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Hey, long time no talk. | |
How's it going? | ||
Good, man. | ||
It has been a while. | ||
How are you, sir? | ||
unidentified
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All right, I just want to come in on a few things so for the game segment this morning Back in the day like early 2000s. | |
We had stuff like the pickup artist, which we don't have anymore And I fell into that where you know working with toys and stuff. | ||
I got a touch of the tisms so I you know I would follow that type of stuff you know and it broke it down into a science of like We're good. | ||
I was never into that stuff, but I've talked to friends who are like, yeah, no, it works. | ||
Like they give you little tricks to do and like you're like hacking the brains of women. | ||
It's crazy stuff, right? | ||
I mean, it works, doesn't it? | ||
unidentified
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Oh, 100%. | |
And like I wouldn't have married my bombshell wife if it wasn't for them. | ||
Oh, there you go. | ||
There's something to it. | ||
unidentified
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Um, and secondly, um, so I listen to you guys obviously, which, you know, you guys cover all the accomplishments of Trump. | |
My buddy, he listens to Nick Fuentes and is completely black billed on, uh, you know, the Israel stuff, the, uh, Massey stuff. | ||
Um, you know, things like that and just trying to like kind of battle him and like, you need to kind of average it out. | ||
Maybe half went to his half Alex Jones to kind of get a equal footing on what Trump is actually up to. | ||
That's probably about the realm I live in, right? | ||
I'm sort of halfway. | ||
I vacillate in between blackpilling and celebrating. | ||
unidentified
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You're like, for every good thing, he's got a bad thing. | |
Right, right, yeah. | ||
For sure. | ||
Well, and that's what I was talking about earlier in the show and people going, oh, you know, we told you so. | ||
I bet you regret it now. | ||
And it's like, no, I don't regret voting for Trump even a tiny bit. | ||
Like he absolutely has been doing incredible stuff. | ||
We knew he wasn't going to be perfect. | ||
I think he's taking too much risk with it when it comes to Iran. | ||
I think he's he's putting our people at risk and it could easily get out of his hands. | ||
Again, I don't think Trump wants to go to war with Iran, but I think he's I think he's being set up. | ||
I think, you know, he's He's allowing situations to occur in which a Pearl Harbor type attack could happen and could quickly spiral out of control and be out of his hands. | ||
But at the same time, I go with Alex. | ||
I go with Alex Jones. | ||
Alex Jones has been doing, I mean, at the end of the day, and I've said this before, you know, if I disagree with Alex about something, I don't think, and this isn't me kissing, but it's just literally how I think, I don't think like, well, Alex is wrong about this and I'm right. | ||
I think Well, what am I missing? | ||
Because Alex has been doing this for 30 years. | ||
He's been doing this since, you know, I was 5 years old. | ||
So, he knows more than me. | ||
He's been in this for longer than me. | ||
He has clearly had a track record of unparalleled success in this realm before. | ||
So, I tend to go with his interpretation. | ||
Also, with the understanding that what we're doing here is fighting a decades-long war. | ||
We're in an intergenerational conflict with the forces of evil. | ||
So, I don't get blackpilled if things don't happen right away. | ||
I understand that things are taking place that take a long time. | ||
I understand that things are happening behind the scenes that we might not be privy to. | ||
At the same time, I'm not willing to go full QAnon and say, just trust the plan, sit back and relax, and everything Trump does is 100% good. | ||
I think he needs to be criticized by his own side. | ||
I mean I definitely had PTSD from those Kamala clips you were playing. | ||
unidentified
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I know. | |
That's the thing, man. | ||
As bad as things are, think about what we could have had. | ||
I mean, my God. | ||
Like, what? | ||
We might go to war with Iran. | ||
At least we don't have to listen to her voice every day. | ||
I mean, I don't know which is worse. | ||
unidentified
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I'm excited for the economic boom and all that type of stuff, but definitely the free speech stuff is concerning for sure. | |
Yeah. You know, things like that. | ||
So I'm with a watchful eye. | ||
Yeah, well, you know, that's what we got to do. | ||
Well, thanks so much for the call, Aaron. | ||
I do appreciate it. | ||
Of course, Aaron is from Braintree Studios. | ||
He's the one that gave us those incredible Action figures, which I guess I should bring back. | ||
I took him home back in, uh, October when everyone, when we're being shut down and everybody here was frantically trying to gather all their personal effects. | ||
So they weren't, you know, confiscated by the onion. | ||
Uh, but maybe I, maybe I need to bring it back, but, um, I'll, I'll tell you, Aaron, my kids. | ||
Are so mad that they can't play with those toys. | ||
I don't let them play with the, with the action figures that, uh, that Aaron made for us. | ||
Cause they're, they're too special for me. | ||
I want to have them for, uh, You know, to pass them on. | ||
But my son is just like, why do you have a toy that you don't let me play with? | ||
And I'm like, it's mint condition in the box. | ||
He's like, let me play with the sword. | ||
We fight about it. | ||
Yeah, because my actual bigger came with a samurai sword that my son is obsessed with. | ||
So yeah, you've got some frustrated fans in my children, Aaron. | ||
So thank you very much for everything that you've done for us. | ||
Braintree Studios, really incredible work. | ||
We got time for one more call. | ||
We'll go to Heidi in Georgia. | ||
Heidi, thank you for calling in. | ||
You're telling us about a group that I know my crew was telling me you got to go to, Heidi. | ||
So what do you have for us, Heidi? | ||
unidentified
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Thank you, Harrison. | |
Hey, I talked to you about a year and a half after my father was killed at a hospital. | ||
That's right. | ||
I remember that. | ||
unidentified
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With a bladder infection. | |
And he was doing great, got better. | ||
They tested him positive for COVID. | ||
And he just went downhill. | ||
I got his records and found out he was drugged. | ||
They put him on high flow. | ||
Absolutely. I remember that, but I'm sorry to cut you off, but we don't have much time left. | ||
I know you have some important news to bring us. | ||
So what is this group that you told the crew about? | ||
unidentified
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Sure. And I found the group. | |
It's BetrayalProject.org. | ||
BetrayalProject.org. | ||
unidentified
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Yes. Thousands of victims all over the country. | |
We're ran by doctors, lawyers, nurses. | ||
We're all involved and we just want to document other people's stories. | ||
Our group leader Gail's right there in Texas and she would love to come and talk if you ever have extra time. | ||
She's a survivor of the protocol and she's actually on trial. | ||
Her husband was a nurse and rescued her out of the hospital. | ||
So it's just Cynthia, we're fighting to get justice for our loved ones and accountability. | ||
This is still going on at hospitals everywhere, so just tell people to be careful out there. | ||
Wow. Yeah, that's very powerful. | ||
I'd love to talk to her. | ||
Betrayalproject.org, B-E-T-R-A-Y-A-L project.org. | ||
Thank you for sharing that with us. | ||
Yeah, we'll stay in touch. | ||
I would love to talk to you. | ||
to her about that because yeah it is still going on and there has been no justice so far for everything they've done to us from COVID and that's that's one of the things that we do need to be getting on the Trump administration about when are these people going to be charged for the crimes against humanity that they committed against so many Americans killing Americans or just mentally torturing them uh they want us to forgive and forget I don't think we should. | ||
I don't think we should. | ||
I think we... | ||
I think justice demands these people be held to account. | ||
That's gonna be it for us this week, folks. | ||
Thanks for joining us. | ||
We'll see you back here on Monday. | ||
Stay tuned! | ||
The Alex Jones Show begins in 90 seconds. | ||
unidentified
|
While other networks lie to you about what's happening now, InfoWars tells you the truth about what's happening next. | |
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