Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
Hats off to Patrick Howley at Patrick Reports for an explosive deep dive into the shadowy dealings surrounding the Carmelo Anthony case. | ||
What's unfolding in Dallas is a textbook example of left-wing manipulation. | ||
With billionaire George Soros' fingerprints all over it, the Next Generation Action Network, a radical activist group, is at the heart of this controversy, and their ties to Soros-funded organizations are impossible to ignore. | ||
But for those of you new to the story, somehow, Carmelo Anthony, a 17-year-old accused of first-degree murder after fatally stabbing Austin Metcalf, At a high school track meet is being propped up as a victim of racist society. | ||
unidentified
|
What do you hope to see with this trial? | |
Do you hope to see him walk free or go to jail? | ||
If you ask, like, a personal opinion, I just want to be home regardless. | ||
You want to be home or even if he did it, you want to be home? | ||
Like I said, bro, I see people that look like me get incarcerated for everything. | ||
You don't care if he did it or not? | ||
Me personally? | ||
Nah. Me personally, I don't care. | ||
Released on reduced bond by a self-proclaimed DEI judge, Anthony's now lounging in a gated Texas community, bankrolled by a suspicious Help Carmelo official fund that's raked in over $450,000 | ||
on Give, Send, Go. | ||
The donations, as Patrick Halley and the Dallas Express uncovered, reek of coordination, identical messages, similar amounts dropping at all hours. | ||
Leading the charge is Dominique Alexander. | ||
unidentified
|
All of the funds that were raised on the GoFundMe were all fraud. | |
The Next Generation Action Network's founder, who is stoking the racial flames with hashtags like hashtag AmericaKKK and hashtag colonialism. | ||
unidentified
|
So after today, I just want the media to know, and I want the public to know, I don't care what you say about me. | |
I've been in this thing for 11 years. | ||
I am tried, tested, and proven. | ||
I'm going to just say, I'm from Oak Cliff. | ||
Worser things have been said about me, baby. | ||
You ain't got to inbox me. | ||
You ain't got to tell me. | ||
I am the first person to tell my testimony. | ||
Alexander has a rap sheet that includes a guilty plea for injuring his ex-girlfriend's two-year-old child in 2008. | ||
In 2016, he helped lead a Dallas protest that ended in Micah Xavier Johnson's ambush, killing five police officers. | ||
Alexander's press conference was a total disaster. | ||
They kicked out Metcalfe's father, a man who had forgiven Carmelo Anthony for the murder of his son. | ||
The Next Generation Action Network's funding is a labyrinth of leftist cash. | ||
IRS filings reveal they've been paid by at least three Soros-linked groups: | ||
The Tides Foundation, BVM Capacity Building Institute, and Resist Incorporated. | ||
Tides, a Soros-backed slush fund, dropped 25 grand on Alexander's group in 2023 for "equity and human rights." | ||
The NGAN Foundation in 2021. | ||
Resist Incorporated, another Soros beneficiary, chipped in seven grand in 2022. | ||
Alexander's group has also dodged accountability with revoked tax-exempt status for failing to file proper 990s under multiple aliases. | ||
What we're seeing is a... | ||
Deliberate push to inflame racial tensions and turn a murder case into a national flashpoint. | ||
This is a psyop. | ||
They want people to go, hey, we're going to peacefully protest in Frisco, Texas. | ||
unidentified
|
And then they're going to have their agitators there, just like they had their agitators in Charlottesville. | |
Soros and his network are orchestrating yet another summer of unrest. | ||
Which gives all of us the uneasy gut feeling of a massive distraction to cover something far more nefarious. | ||
unidentified
|
It's Monday, April 21st in the year of our Lord 2025. | |
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
I think it's time to blow this thing. | ||
Get everybody and stuff together. | ||
Surprise, surprise, it's not Harrison Smith. | ||
It's your friendly neighborhood host Rob Dew running it today. | ||
It's been interesting here at the American Journal getting stuff ready this morning. | ||
But what's been going on this weekend? | ||
You know, obviously this weekend was many anniversaries. | ||
You know, the shot heard around the world happened earlier at the end of the week. | ||
Then we had the Oklahoma City bombing. | ||
We had the Waco massacre. | ||
All these interesting government, I guess, examples of the government trying to cause terror among the citizens. | ||
So you go back to the shot heard around the world. | ||
The British government was coming in to confiscate people's guns. | ||
And the people said, no, you're not going to take our guns. | ||
And so that started the Revolutionary War. | ||
Then you look at Waco. | ||
The government came in and said, oh, we think you're a bad person. | ||
David Koresh. | ||
And so they try to raid his place. | ||
There's a gun battle with ATF soldiers and FBI. | ||
A lot of different groups getting together. | ||
And then they have this standoff where they demonize these people for 51 days. | ||
And then it leads to basically burning them alive using tear gas. | ||
And then as people were running out the back door shooting those people. | ||
And that's your government. | ||
That was Bill Clinton. | ||
In fact, we got a clip of Bill Clinton coming up in a little bit talking about the 30th anniversary of Oklahoma City. | ||
The Oklahoma City bombing, which was covered extensively. | ||
If you've seen the documentary, and I'll play a long excerpt of it at the second half of this hour of the Oklahoma City bombing from 9-11 Road to Tyranny. | ||
Which, if you watch 9-11 Road to Tyranny, I think the Oklahoma City information is more powerful than the 9-11 information at the time. | ||
I think Alex put this out in 2002. | ||
I remember seeing it in the theater and just being blown away by the live footage that was sent to him on VHS tape. | ||
People were just taping. | ||
Taping things in their house. | ||
You don't have VHS players anymore where you can record stuff you're watching on TV. | ||
You have to go through a DVR. | ||
No, then they can erase it if they want to. | ||
So he's showing video footage of the newscast saying, oh, look, here comes the bomb truck going in to find, they get the second and third bomb, which is even bigger than the first bomb. | ||
And then, oh, here they are leaving. | ||
And then the governor's brother writing a book. | ||
Where the guy's name is Todd McVeigh and he blows up a federal building. | ||
I mean, it just gets crazier and crazier. | ||
So I want to play some of that just so people know what's going on. | ||
But I think we're starting to see signs of the COVID hoax, the COVID vaccine hoax really unraveling. | ||
And two articles over the weekend on Daily Mail were published. | ||
The first one exclusive. | ||
I contracted a rare disease that's been linked to the COVID vaccine. | ||
Now I've lost my ability to speak. | ||
And it's about this lady, Vanessa Abraham, who helping people find her voices. | ||
She's 45, younger than me. | ||
Spent years helping children. | ||
And then after she got her COVID vaccine, she started getting these weird paralysis and having respiratory failure. | ||
And then, oh, she kind of figures it out. | ||
And then here's another one. | ||
All the signs that you could have a COVID vaccine injury. | ||
Why I thought these things were safe and effective, I thought they were no problem. | ||
I thought it was, you know, God's gift, man's gift to man, the COVID vaccine. | ||
But now it's looking like, oh, the tides are turning. | ||
There's so many neurological issues. | ||
There's so many people dying suddenly that it can't be ignored. | ||
And in fact, I want to go to this. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Do I have this first one on here? | ||
No. I'm going to have to find that one maybe during the break. | ||
But I had a shot of this lady. | ||
Unless y'all have this. | ||
Do y'all have the videos that I put in this morning? | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. Okay. | |
Let's go to the shots to collapse the immune system. | ||
Okay, this is the one about, it's this lady, and is this the one with the old lady on it? | ||
It's at Olayda. | ||
It's got some text underneath it. | ||
unidentified
|
It's got some text underneath it. | |
Yeah, that's five. | ||
Okay. Oh, awakening is hard. | ||
There we go. | ||
Okay. Sorry about this. | ||
We're just ironing out the kinks. | ||
But what we have is this lady whose baby died in the 80s of SIDS. | ||
And then she starts seeing news reports of what is called SADS, sudden adult death syndrome. | ||
Because when the vaccine kills you, it's not the vaccine. | ||
It's just sudden death. | ||
And so they love to play this little sudden death game. | ||
So let's go to this clip real quick. | ||
Here we go. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm freaking out because something that's been going on for over 40 years. | |
It just hit me. | ||
I had a child that died of SIDS in 1984. | ||
For people that don't know what SIDS is, it's called Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or Crib Death was another one. | ||
I've been saying this for 40 years, over 40 years. | ||
I don't understand this. | ||
He was just at the doctor's two weeks before. | ||
Got his shots. | ||
He had the perfect health. | ||
Everything was great. | ||
And then last night, I watched, have you been watching Mrs. G, the medical examiner? | ||
I can't say it now. | ||
Anyway, I watched her show, and she says, what's at rise right now is the sudden adult syndrome. | ||
Same thing as SIDS, but it's for adults. | ||
What happened lately that was forced upon people that they had to have? | ||
And all of a sudden, the rise of these adults dying for no reason is happening? | ||
And it dawned on me. | ||
I poisoned my kid two weeks before with a vaccine that I was told was safe. | ||
What if that's the cause of sudden infant death syndrome and they've been lying to us all this time and they've been experimenting on our babies since 1984 and before and it's just come to light because We get more education now. | ||
We can get reached education. | ||
We're not just told whatever they want us to tell. | ||
We can look research online. | ||
What if that's the cause of sins? | ||
What if me doing what I thought was good killed my baby? | ||
And it's just hitting me right now because I never put two to two together until now. | ||
Tell me what you guys think. | ||
Do you think I'm kind of off my rocker? | ||
Do you think I'm just... | ||
Being stupid? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Because his death shaped my whole adult life. | ||
Changed it completely. | ||
And I just wonder where I would be, what kind of person I would be if he didn't die. | ||
It made me very bitter and angry. | ||
It really did. | ||
That is the process of awakening that you're seeing right now going on across this country. | ||
And I was just informed we have breaking news. | ||
It seems Pope Francis has died. | ||
So we should see the, I guess, the upper-level bishops getting together. | ||
And there it is. | ||
Pope found dead Easter Monday. | ||
So he made it through Easter Sunday. | ||
He met with J.D. Vance. | ||
Although people were trying to say he was blowing him off. | ||
Well, maybe he was in the process of dying. | ||
You know, we've seen the last few popes not really live up. | ||
I think their potential, they've kind of towed the New World Order talking points. | ||
And so I'm not expecting anything different. | ||
Although some people are suspecting that they're going to bring in the first African-American pope. | ||
Or not African-American, the first black pope. | ||
So probably from Africa. | ||
They will anoint him or canonize him, whatever. | ||
I don't even know what the term is when they pope you. | ||
I guess they put your hat on and give you the staff. | ||
And you go and... | ||
Guys, see if you can find the picture where he's in the room that looks like a giant snake. | ||
And it's pretty demonic looking. | ||
So, you know, I know this is a big world event that they're going to talk about for days now about the Pope dying and this stuff. | ||
But I look at... | ||
Yeah, there he is in the room that looks like a giant snake. | ||
You can see the two eyes there in the background. | ||
And then there's the other one where it's got that stuff behind him. | ||
And this might be this room. | ||
It's from the stage, looking at the stage. | ||
And it's just completely disturbing. | ||
And I've been to the Vatican. | ||
There's a lot of disturbing things on the walls and the doors of the Vatican. | ||
It's like people being tortured. | ||
And maybe it has to show what the church has gone through to get to where it is. | ||
You know, that's all in Rome in Vatican City. | ||
Yeah, there's an interesting... | ||
Now, why would the Pope put himself there? | ||
You can see the Pope guards. | ||
I think they're called the Swiss guards. | ||
And they're there. | ||
But look at that. | ||
That doesn't seem very holy. | ||
It seems like he's sitting in front of the gates of hell. | ||
So, yeah, that's my take on the Pope dying. | ||
You know, I don't... | ||
I'm not wishing death on the Pope or anything like that, but these guys really need to change their tune. | ||
They really need to look at what's going on in the world and stop kowtowing to the new world order because that's what seems is going on. | ||
But we've got these COVID. | ||
I want to go back to the COVID stuff, go back to these COVID vaccine injuries. | ||
These are happening. | ||
And a video popped up on my timeline. | ||
Talking about how they collapsed your immune system, and the first one takes away 50% of your white blood cells, and the next one takes away another 25%. | ||
And then they inject you with HIV and different forms of bacteria. | ||
And this is sort of in the vein of those videos that Vice put out, where they get an undercover person and have them talk. | ||
This is a different group, but it kind of reminded me of those Vice videos. | ||
But this is very interesting, and I think it's something we should revisit. | ||
As we see more people starting to come out, and now we're seeing publications, instead of just saying the vaccine's safe and effective and everybody should take it, we're seeing, oh, hey, you might have a vaccine injury. | ||
So now it's like Camp Lejeune, where there's going to be a class-action lawsuit for drinking the tainted water. | ||
Oh, now it's you took the tainted vaccine. | ||
Well, here's this video. | ||
unidentified
|
It decreases the ability to produce white blood cells by 50% from your first vaccine. | |
Then eight weeks later, which is white blood cell reproductive system. | ||
So your ability to make another generation of white blood cells is eight weeks. | ||
That's why they set it up eight weeks later to hit it again. | ||
So you hit the white blood cell ability while it's down. | ||
So now what you do is now they decrease the saline in the second one and they increase the harmful ingredients. | ||
So now you have a shift in the ingredients. | ||
So they decrease the saline and increase. | ||
So now there's a shift. | ||
And then what they do is that second dose attacks your ability to make white blood cells by an additional 25%. | ||
So now you only have the ability to make white blood cells functioning at 25%. | ||
So you just wiped out 75% of your military. | ||
And the ability to make that military. | ||
Then what they do is they set in the booster. | ||
The booster has 81 strands of foreign bacteria that your cells have never come across. | ||
You don't have the antibodies to fight it, but you only have 25% of your white blood cell production to be able to fight it. | ||
So it's a losing battle. | ||
So then what starts to happen is you start to get chronic inflammation that goes to the areas that you had... | ||
You had predisposition. | ||
So if you were someone that has gut health issues, that's your area that it's going to focus on. | ||
And you're going to have inflammation in the gut health. | ||
If it's respiratory, if you have... | ||
Tumor or cancer or if you have, say, endometriosis or you have a skin condition, whatever that is, it's going to inflame that area because now the body has hit the sympathetic nervous system, which is the fight or flight, and the body is in a chronic inflammatory state with a low immunity and a low immune response. | ||
Then you get your second booster. | ||
What the second booster has is it has eight strands of HIV. | ||
And now what that does is it completely shuts off your ability to make white blood cells. | ||
And if you Google what that disease is, it is HIV. | ||
So now we have people that are walking around with no immune system, no ability to make an immune system, 81 strands of foreign bacteria, and then also eight strands of foreign HIV, along with all the other harmful ingredients. | ||
All the other harmful ingredients she meant to say. | ||
And what have we learned since then? | ||
Oh, there's the simian virus 40 that causes cancer and caused cancer in hundreds of millions of people with the polio shot. | ||
We're finding other DNA. | ||
We're finding, well, she's saying eight different forms of bacteria. | ||
So all this stuff is starting to come to a head. | ||
And we're hoping, you know, I think a lot of people hoped when President Trump got in, we would see, you know, a reversal on a lot of these policies, which, of course, he never mandated anything. | ||
But we do have this that came out. | ||
The White House posted this late last week called Lab Leak, the true origins of COVID-19. | ||
And so... | ||
I like this origin. | ||
The proximal origin of SARS-CoV-2, which was repeatedly used by public health officials and media to discredit the lab leak theory, was promoted by Dr. Fauci to push the preferred narrative that COVID-19 originated naturally. | ||
And what they're finding is, well, the virus possesses biological characteristics not found in nature. | ||
Data shows all COVID-19 cases stem from a single... | ||
Introduction into Humans. | ||
This runs contrary to previous pandemics where there were multiple spillover events. | ||
So there was just one spillover event. | ||
Wuhan is home to Chinese foremost SARS Research Lab, which has a history of conducting gain-of-function research. | ||
And, you know, I'm surprised they didn't go through the life cycle of this because they were studying this in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. | ||
And then we put a halt on gain-of-function research. | ||
So what did they do? | ||
Oh, we're just going to move it. | ||
To Wuhan. | ||
So Wuhan researchers were sick and with COVID-like symptoms in the fall of 2019, months before COVID-19 was discovered at the wet market. | ||
By nearly all measures of science, there is evidence of natural origin. | ||
It would have already surfaced, but it hasn't. | ||
And it makes sense that the wet market, supposedly where it came from, is just down the road. | ||
What'd they say? | ||
Seven miles? | ||
Seven and a half miles down the road from... | ||
The Wuhan Institute of Virology, who is employing the Bat Lady, Xi Jinping, who is also working with Ralph Baric. | ||
And this is all stuff that I just have in my head. | ||
I don't even need to, like, look at documents. | ||
Over the years, we've learned all the different ways that COVID was being worked on and fiddled with. | ||
And now they've added, what, HIV to it? | ||
You can see that. | ||
And there was animations that came out that said, oh, look, we pulled this strand out. | ||
We put in this HIV insert. | ||
And immediately some Indian researchers found this when they started analyzing it. | ||
And that was like, oh, no, no, no, no, no. | ||
So I'm sure the hammer came down on these Indians. | ||
And it was like, listen, you better not put this out. | ||
You better not keep this in publication. | ||
So, oh, we had to remove that publication because it was bad. | ||
Well, it turns out it probably wasn't bad. | ||
When you're getting threatened by the system, you do as you're told. | ||
But I encourage people to go read this on WhiteHouse.gov. | ||
It's called Lab Leak, The True Origins of COVID-19. | ||
And you can just read. | ||
It's even got Fauci's clemency order on here. | ||
And they talk about HHS obstruction, EcoHealth Alliance obstruction. | ||
EcoHealth President Peter Daszak obstructed the select committee's investigation by providing publicly available information, inserting his staff to reduce the scope and pace of production and doctoring documents before releasing to the public. | ||
Furthermore, Dr. Daszak provided false statements to Congress. | ||
You know, these are all things you should get arrested for. | ||
If you or I were to promote false statements to Congress or get in front of Congress, that's called perjury. | ||
But when these guys do it... | ||
It seems to be, well, you know, we're just going to let them hang out for a while and see what they can do. | ||
But we published an interview that Peter Daszak had, I think, with Virology Today where he's talking about, you know, basically quarterbacking this whole thing. | ||
And this is stuff we did years ago. | ||
And I think Alex called him the project manager of the COVID-19 pandemic because he was basically getting money from NIH and then he was giving the money. | ||
So we had this level of distance. | ||
So Fauci could go and say, we never gave money to anybody. | ||
He could sit in there in Congress and say, we didn't give money for any programs like this. | ||
And he was technically right. | ||
He was giving it to Peter Daszak, who was then turning around and handing it to Wuhan and other areas. | ||
So, wow. | ||
It looks like we have more breaking news. | ||
Klaus Schwab resigns from the WEF with immediate effect. | ||
So he was talking about stepping down, but he would kind of do this slow process, but it looks like it's gone faster. | ||
Maybe he actually took a real vaccine and didn't get the saline shot. | ||
And here we have on InfoWars breaking Pope Francis' dead at 7.35 this morning. | ||
The Bishop of Rome, Francis returned home. | ||
They're saying he returned home of the father. | ||
His entire life was dedicated in the service of the Lord and of the truth, said Cardinal Kevin Farrell. | ||
Vatican karma lingo in an announcement. | ||
So he had a lot of problems there. | ||
They put him on a ventilator. | ||
They were giving him drugs that caused him to retain fluid. | ||
And that usually means you're about to have kidney problems. | ||
And so who knows if they're going to do an autopsy on him or just commit his body. | ||
To the ground. | ||
So there goes Pope Francis and we'll have, I'm sure, so here we, look, odds, betting odds favor Filipino Cardinal to replace Pope Francis. | ||
So they're giving it a 50% chance and it's Cardinal Louis Antonion Tegel is the clear favorite. | ||
He hails from the Philippines. | ||
So not necessarily a black guy, but a non-European. | ||
You could say. | ||
So from the Philippines. | ||
So they're giving him a 50%. | ||
Other frontrunners include Pietro Pallion, who serves as the Vatican Secretary of State. | ||
And then French Cardinal Jean-Marc Aveline. | ||
And it looks like that's about it. | ||
So I'm reading this live as it's happening. | ||
But yeah, breaking news. | ||
The Pope has died. | ||
So we will soon see the congregation. | ||
Go into their little room, and then I think it's the white smoke. | ||
When the white smoke comes up, that's when they've announced a new pope. | ||
We'll see if they take a long time to do it or if this is going to be something that's quick. | ||
So we got like a minute left, and I want to come back and get into a little bit of this video of a researcher talking about how she found the purchase orders for... | ||
COVID shots, but they were just with saline. | ||
And this goes to something we were talking about a long time ago, that some people were getting saline shots or clean shots, and they knew these lots went out. | ||
And there was a supposition that some of these shots went to the first round of nurses. | ||
So when the first round of nurses took it, nobody had any problems or died. | ||
Oh, it's safe. | ||
Well, they were just getting a saline shot. | ||
It's crazy stuff. | ||
It's finally coming out. | ||
It's 2025 now, and we're finally... | ||
We might even be able to find a video that I did back in 2020 talking about... | ||
If you look at what I was talking about then, how they're going to try to push a vaccine to cure this thing. | ||
And then I play a video of Maurice Hilleman, who's talking about how they were finding the SB40 virus, and it was going to give the Russians tumors. | ||
Because they were testing it over in Russia in the polio vaccine then in the 1950s. | ||
And they knew all this. | ||
They knew all these things were bad. | ||
They knew it was bad. | ||
And they did it anyway. | ||
You've got to ask yourself why. | ||
Because there's a mindset that these people have. | ||
And it's not to further humanity. | ||
It is to cull the population. | ||
They think there's too many people on this planet. | ||
So that's their mission is to keep us sick and hurting and just not in our spirit so we can't see what's going on around us so we can't fight. | ||
But we'll be right back with more. | ||
I'll talk to you about the guests we have coming up as well for the rest of the show. | ||
Thank you for joining me on the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Rob Diggs. | ||
Good morning, everyone. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal. | ||
This is the second half of the first hour, and we were talking about how Well, not to us. | ||
If you've been, I guess, a regular viewer, watcher, producer, spreader of information, info warrior, you knew the COVID vaccine was bad. | ||
You knew it was going to cause problems. | ||
You were trying to warn people. | ||
You were putting out videos every time you see somebody dying suddenly of a heart attack, previously healthy. | ||
I think the Spurs coach is having some issues now. | ||
And there's even video of him getting the shot. | ||
Greg Popovich, or I don't even know if he's the Spurs coach anymore. | ||
He might have resigned. | ||
But he had a stroke, and then he had some more health problems, and he's back in the hospital now. | ||
And you could trace all this back to these people if they want to be honest. | ||
See, the problem is none of these people want to be honest. | ||
They don't want to be honest with the American people and come out and say, hey, I took this vaccine. | ||
It screwed me up. | ||
But yeah, there's old Greg Popovich, who's a DEI fanatic. | ||
Woke is a woke ambassador. | ||
There he is getting the COVID vaccine. | ||
And that's actually a video on YouTube of him telling you to go get the vaccine and telling you to wear the mask and telling you to stay six feet apart because he buys in to what the system's selling. | ||
So we already know a lot of what we're seeing. | ||
And it's not a bunch of I told you so, but it's, hey, we were right. | ||
Maybe you'll listen to us next time. | ||
So I want to go to this clip six. | ||
And this is the Maha podcast. | ||
Ian Carroll's doing it. | ||
And then there's... | ||
Her name, I think, is Destiny or something like that. | ||
But she's a researcher. | ||
I've seen some of her stuff before. | ||
I think we've even put some of her stuff on InfoWars before. | ||
She's a really good researcher digging deep. | ||
And she found the purchase orders for the saline COVID vaccines, which are just saline, but basically, you know, non-alcoholic COVID vaccines. | ||
So here it is. | ||
unidentified
|
I found this contract. | |
There's a government contract system called the Federal Procurement Data System, which I happen to nerd out on quite frequently. | ||
And they list every single, what the title says, federally procured contract. | ||
It has to go onto this data system, and they have to be on there within 24 hours of the contract being made. | ||
And it's an incredible use for the fellow researchers out there. | ||
It's a little hard to figure out how to use, but if I can figure out how to use it, you'll figure it out. | ||
And so I was on there looking through all the Operation Warp Speed contracts, and I came across, and I believe it was Pfizer, but it could have been Resilience. | ||
It was one of the two, and it was $20 million for the contract. | ||
On Operation Warp Speed Contract for $20 million of pure saline injections. | ||
And so I remember thinking, why would they need $20 million worth of saline injections that wouldn't cover the entire country, but it would cover a certain sector of people? | ||
Almost like a control group, you could say. | ||
I heard tell that a lot of the nurses that first rollout, that very early first rollout, were just saline shots. | ||
I don't know what's what about that, but I remember hearing it. | ||
Well, there's definitely ways to check. | ||
I mean, we're so far out from the release of the vaccine now that the data would be very muddled. | ||
But there is a way to distinguish between spike gotten naturally and spike via the vaccine. | ||
And what they could do if we weren't so far out is we could have decided to test that. | ||
And see who actually got the actual vaccine and made an antibody test specifically for the vaccine, which we can do. | ||
they just haven't done because then we'd be able to distinguish whether or not someone who actually thought they got it actually got saline and we could start to like write down those lot numbers and track back whose contract is responsible for the | ||
Yeah, that would require some action on behalf of the people that made billions of dollars off of this whole fucked up test. | ||
I mean, like, to be clear, it's also... | ||
Completely immoral to give people saline when you're telling them you're giving them a vaccine. | ||
unidentified
|
Even if the vaccine is immoral to begin with, it's like, let's lie about the poison that we're going to give you, and then we're going to lie and actually give you saline, which is also illegal. | |
It's just turtles all the way down, basically. | ||
It's totally fucked. | ||
All right, we can pull it out there. | ||
I forgot. | ||
Ian Carroll jumps in and starts dropping a couple F-bombs, but I think we've got those out. | ||
I had an interesting conversation. | ||
In 2021, I was getting some plywood. | ||
I was working on a project, and this guy's helping me load plywood up. | ||
And I had just been pretty sick from the regular COVID. | ||
I think I caught the Delta variant or something. | ||
But thank you to Dr. Richard Bartlett, who was able to give me some prescriptions and turn it around immediately. | ||
That's beside the point. | ||
So I met this guy. | ||
He's a carpenter in Dripping Springs. | ||
And he was one of the people involved in the COVID tests, the COVID vaccine tests. | ||
And he was doing Pfizer. | ||
And he said to me, he goes, well, I found out they gave me a placebo. | ||
They didn't give me the real thing. | ||
But then they contacted me and said, if I still wanted to get the vaccine, I could go get it. | ||
I said, well, doesn't that negate the test? | ||
Because you're the control group now. | ||
You're the guy, and he's like, I know. | ||
That's what I said, but they said it was okay. | ||
So I went and got the vaccine. | ||
I'm like, well, and I actually got his number card, his card, and I passed it on to some producers who were working on a COVID documentary. | ||
I said, call this guy up. | ||
I haven't talked to him, but maybe, you know, see how he's doing, because he actually participated in the trial, got a saline version, like what they were talking about there, these saline vials that went out. | ||
Pretended to be COVID vaccines, but they were just giving them to probably frontline workers, probably some doctors, you know, the first round of people, so nobody sees people dropping dead. | ||
You know, we saw the nurse collapse, and then, remember that, the nurse collapse, and then we didn't hear from her for months, and then she appeared again, but she didn't quite look like the same person that we saw. | ||
And, yeah, there she is in the bottom right corner. | ||
Didn't feel so good. | ||
You know, we keep pointing this out and we keep saying, hey, look at it. | ||
And the mainstream media did a great job of just covering it up, pretending it wasn't happening and trying to hide these clips. | ||
And thank goodness, you know, people like us and other people out there were able to find these and put them out and keep that narrative going of, hey, we need to look at this thing. | ||
We need to, well, don't take the vaccine, first of all, but plenty of people did. | ||
So it's pretty crazy. | ||
Where we're at now, we're finally getting to the heart of it. | ||
And so I want to switch gears, though, and get into Oklahoma City because I do have two guests coming up. | ||
One in the second hour, we're going to have Morgan Rockwell, who runs a company called Mycosoft. | ||
And he really is, I think, transforming the space of what you can do with mushrooms and using mushrooms as a tool, not just as a food source and a medicine. | ||
But using it in other ways, and he's really pioneering that. | ||
And he's a guy that I think we're going to see good things from in the future. | ||
And then in the third hour, we're going to have Scott Armstrong, who's helped develop the product along with some other people that basically will make your searches for Alex Jones quotes will make it that much more easier. | ||
And this is specifically geared towards... | ||
People who watch the Alex Jones show and people, when they hear Alex talk about, hey, go back and find when I said this. | ||
These guys have developed a tool that you could actually do that. | ||
And when I say we've, I've helped them a little bit when I was encouraging them, yes, develop this tool. | ||
And I've been able to find different spots where they could add more stuff to it. | ||
So they're going to be adding more to it. | ||
Right now, I think they're doing it based off our Rumble channel. | ||
But they're going to be using other things. | ||
So it's pretty amazing what they've developed. | ||
And we're going to do some live on-air demonstrations. | ||
And also, I want to take your calls in the third hour. | ||
So we'll do some calls and demonstrating this new product that people can go on. | ||
It's free. | ||
You can go on just to the website and use it. | ||
And, oh, it happens to link back to the AlexJonesStore.com, which is how we fund everything here, in case you weren't aware of that. | ||
We don't get NPR money. | ||
I was listening to an interview from the head of NPR. | ||
They get about a billion dollars when you take in public radio and NPR and public television and all the money they get from the government. | ||
About a billion dollars a year. | ||
And they say that's only 1% of their budget to create propaganda. | ||
We don't create propaganda. | ||
We were telling you for years about the COVID vaccine. | ||
We were telling you for years about... | ||
The origins of COVID. | ||
Now we're proven right. | ||
So now we got the last ride Supercell paying homage to, I guess, Paul Revere. | ||
And also to, this could be, we're coming up on the end of InfoWars. | ||
But we don't know. | ||
Nothing's set in stone yet. | ||
But check out some of our products. | ||
We have the Shilajit gummies. | ||
If you know about Shilajit, there's different types out there. | ||
We have some of the cleanest you're ever going to find. | ||
And the Shilajit gummies are... | ||
You know, make taking Shilajit, I guess, that much easier if you're into the gummies. | ||
We also have the Shilajit pills, which have a little more, they have some of the Irish sea moss in there, some burdock, ashwagandha, boron citrate, black cumin, along with the Shilajit extract, also CoQ10 and black pepper. | ||
So the capsules are a little more fortified, I think, than the gummies. | ||
But there's a lot of people out there who just like taking gummies. | ||
They like their spoonful of sugar to help the medicine go down. | ||
So check out the Shilajit gummies. | ||
They're fairly new. | ||
I think they've only been out for a week and a half at thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
Also, if you like gummies, we have the Ultimate CMOS gummies. | ||
But we also have the Ultimate CMOS capsules. | ||
So you've got CMOS gummies, CMOS capsules. | ||
Shilajit gummies, Shilajit capsules, and also, I'd say, taking the office by storm and taking, I think, Info Warriors out there is this Ultra Methylene Blue, which is the prescription-grade version. | ||
Very high quality, and it's also got a little bit of flavor to it. | ||
It's got a little bit of vanilla, a little bit of mint mixed in with it, which really, if you've ever taken Methylene Blue, Kind of nasty. | ||
But ours is pretty amazing. | ||
You don't have to add anything to it. | ||
You could put it in water. | ||
I've done some dropper fulls. | ||
I actually did some with Harrison one time. | ||
We were testing it, mixing it with vitamin C to see how it would taste with his older version of methylene blue. | ||
And then we started carrying ultra-methylene blue, which you can see there on the screen at thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
You know, I'd encourage you to subscribe to all these. | ||
You get one bottle a month. | ||
And right now, the Silogee Gummies, 50% off if you subscribe. | ||
Same with the methylene blue. | ||
Or you can get it, you know, by buying different versions. | ||
You can get it for 35% off up to 40% off getting different versions of it. | ||
So check out the subscription. | ||
You don't have a bunch of bottles that you have to hoard and put in a spot. | ||
You get one a month. | ||
And so it also won't break the bank in the beginning. | ||
And it's just a steady stream and it keeps us going on the air. | ||
And here's the great thing about the Alex Jones store.com. | ||
When you support the Alex Jones store.com, you also help support Alex in going after some of these, these groups that are, I think you're going to hear some news today. | ||
I don't want to jump the gun here, but there you are going to hear some news about some lawsuits. | ||
Alex is going to be filing against some of these people who are trying to take away his first amendment. | ||
So stay tuned for that. | ||
It's going to be. | ||
That's where it's at. | ||
But let's go now. | ||
We got about 11 minutes. | ||
I want to play a little bit of this of Bill Clinton talking about the 30th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing. | ||
And then we're going to go into some of Oklahoma City bombing from Alex Jones. | ||
I wanted to play more of it, but we got about 10 minutes. | ||
I got a little long-winded, but let's... | ||
Let's go to Bill Clinton now gloating over the fact that he helped kill American citizens with a false flag attack. | ||
unidentified
|
In recent years, the country has grown more polarized. | |
And on that awful day 30 years ago, you were the center of the polarization. | ||
Now look what you've built. | ||
And yet we have these differences. | ||
And it seems to me, I listen to this a lot because I'm old and I can't run for anything anymore. | ||
I always kid. | ||
I'm almost as old as President Trump. | ||
What's funny is he sounds five times worse than President Trump. | ||
unidentified
|
If you would listen to a lot of what I read and hear today, it's like everybody's arguing about whose resentments matter most. | |
Whose resentments are more valid? | ||
Like importing millions of illegals into our country? | ||
MS-13 gang members that are trying to stop their deportations? | ||
Those kind of resentments? | ||
unidentified
|
To increase your advantage. | |
Our advantage? | ||
We just want what's rightfully ours. | ||
unidentified
|
If our lives are going to be dominated by the effort to dominate people we disagree with, we're going to put the 250-year-old march toward a more perfect union at risk. | |
None of us would ever get much done. | ||
All right, well, let's cut it out there. | ||
So the march to the more perfect union, that's the part that I like. | ||
So the more perfect union means open borders. | ||
It means forced vaccinations from their perspective. | ||
It means you in control of our schools. | ||
It means people who aren't taught to think, who are taught to obey. | ||
That's what their more perfect union is. | ||
They want obedient workers, as George Carlin says. | ||
You know, he's there at the 30th anniversary of Oklahoma City. | ||
Let's just watch a little bit. | ||
Scroll forward about 20 seconds in because I think Alex starts talking at about 30 seconds. | ||
And, you know, you could go watch The Road to Tyranny. | ||
You can find it on band.video. | ||
And I'd encourage you to go watch it. | ||
The first hour is mainly about Oklahoma City. | ||
But here's just an excerpt of it. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
These are the images that they would broadcast over and over again of | |
We've hurt people, people running in fear of, you know, people bloody. | ||
This was part of the psy-op because they had to show this. | ||
They had to show the full-color pictures in Time magazine and, you know, show the first responders. | ||
unidentified
|
April 19th, 1995, in downtown Oklahoma City, multiple bombs ripped through the Alford P. Murrow Federal Building. | |
And as usual, federal fingerprints were all over this tragic event. | ||
Then-President Bill Clinton, taking his orders from on high from the New World Order chieftains, needed a crisis to get his gun control agenda through, as well as his plans for a socialized America. | ||
Taking a page out of the Strong Men's Handbook, Bill Clinton knew that a crisis of this magnitude, endless images of mangled children, would pull on the heartstrings of the American people, and they would beg for the anti-terrorism effective death penalty act that he had failed to pass just a year before. | ||
The bill absolutely eviscerated. | ||
Massive sections of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. | ||
We've been investigating this tragedy for over six years. | ||
The amount of evidence is staggering. | ||
Let's just hit some of the key points. | ||
Now let's get into it. | ||
...station that that one explosion caused, because here's now what we are starting to learn about the succession or what... | ||
Someone obviously hoped would be a succession of explosions. | ||
The first bomb that was in the federal building did go off. | ||
It did the damage that you see right there. | ||
The second explosive was found and diffused. | ||
The third explosive that was found, and they are working on right now as we speak, I understand, both the second and third explosives, if you can imagine this, were larger than the first. | ||
So try to imagine two or threefold happening. | ||
What we've already seen there. | ||
It is just incredible to think that there was that much heavy artillery that was somehow moved into the downtown Oklahoma City Federal Building. | ||
Two other explosive devices were found that were not detonated and they were larger than the first. | ||
I think he said another bomb. | ||
Another bomb, who's that? | ||
Oh my God, another bomb. | ||
We just saw... | ||
If you were watching there, there was a white pickup truck backing a trailer into the scene here. | ||
They're trying to move people out of the way so they can get it in. | ||
Appears to be the Oklahoma County bomb squad. | ||
It's their bomb disposal unit, essentially, is what it is. | ||
And it is what they would use to, if the report that we gave you just a few moments ago turns out to be correct, that they have found a second explosive device of some kind inside this building, they'll back that trailer down there, and the bomb squad folks will go in. | ||
And they will use that trailer. | ||
You see the bucket on the back there? | ||
This is how they would transport the explosive device away from this populated area to try to do something with it. | ||
The Justice Department is reporting that a second explosive device has been found in the AP Murrah building in downtown Oklahoma City. | ||
Mike, you're still with us, aren't you? | ||
Yes, I am. | ||
And I might tell you, in addition to that, that, in fact, what we were told at the scene a few minutes ago was that, in fact, two different explosive devices were So a total of three. | ||
A total of three. | ||
Through federal authorities that a second bomb has been found inside that federal building in Oklahoma City. | ||
It was an explosion at 9 o'clock this morning. | ||
That did that damage you're looking at right there, blowing off the entire north face of that building. | ||
Again, you're looking at the north face there. | ||
A second bomb was found on the east side of that building. | ||
A bomb squad is on the scene. | ||
That second bomb has not exploded. | ||
We don't know quite the status yet if they've managed to defuse it, but it has been confirmed that a second bomb was found on the east side. | ||
The important thing I have is that one device was deactivated. | ||
Apparently, there's another device, and obviously, whatever did the damage to the Murriban | ||
So, President Clinton just called Frank Keating, Governor Frank Keating, and he says that three FBI anti-terrorist teams are in route to Oklahoma City. | ||
Right now, they are saying that this is the work of a sophisticated group. | ||
This is a very sophisticated device. | ||
And it has to have been done by an explosives expert, obviously, with this type of explosion. | ||
The medical teams downtown are unable to get into the wreckage to retrieve more of the injured because of the presence of other bombs in the area. | ||
I just took a look down the street at the Mara building again. | ||
unidentified
|
I see another bomb truck going, so apparently they're going to try to get out that third bomb that's been talked about. | |
Still a lot of activity around the Mara building. | ||
unidentified
|
Security concerns that another one still might go up. | |
Fortunately, it didn't, because the second device that they found, we understand, was even more powerful than the first. | ||
They then found a third device, and you can see the look on this woman's face at the fear that she might have to go through the same thing again. | ||
They then found a third device, which was also larger than the first. | ||
Do you see what's happening here? | ||
Do you see what's happening? | ||
unidentified
|
Did we ever hear, after this came through, about a second and third bomb? | |
No, this was local news. | ||
unidentified
|
These were people on the ground recording this. | |
It was a great stroke of blood that we actually have got VHS tapes. | ||
unidentified
|
It's through the bomb material that we will be able to track down who committed this atrocity. | |
It would have been an incredible help to have been able to get a hold of those unexploded bombs. | ||
Unfortunately, the BATF, according to police and firefighter testimony, were inside removing them and spiriting them away because they had to keep their story straight that there was only one bomb, a truck bomb. | ||
Out of hundreds of people we interviewed, we couldn't find a single person who said they'd heard only one explosion. | ||
unidentified
|
Did you live here, Charles, at the time of the bomb? | |
I live here. | ||
unidentified
|
I work right here in this building. | |
I was at work. | ||
I was at work. | ||
Did you feel it? | ||
Yeah, I thought this building was blowing up. | ||
How many blasts did you feel? | ||
Two. And how far apart were they? | ||
Oh, probably about boom, and then it's boom. | ||
It's a historical fact, part of the public record, that there were multiple devices inside the Oklahoma City building. | ||
And that there were at least two explosions. | ||
The emergency radio transmission transcripts show clearly that the police and firefighters were on the record witnessing the BATF removing unexploded devices. | ||
But you see, we have the actual scientific fact. | ||
We have the University of Oklahoma's own seismograph reports, as well as the U.S. Geological Survey reports. | ||
Two different scientific institutions showing multiple explosions. | ||
But you see, McVeigh would have had to have had accomplices, and that didn't fit in to the federal story. | ||
Especially if the reality showed that it had to be somebody who had access to a federal building for long extended periods of time. | ||
General Benton K. Parton is the former head of Air Force Weapons Development. | ||
We'll go ahead and pull it out there. | ||
I had, I think, about 25 minutes of video. | ||
Just because I'm like, it's all so good. | ||
But seeing the video, the live footage of the second and third bomb and the bomb truck backing up, and now you have Bill Clinton running around going, oh, we're talking about our grievances. | ||
And it's like, no, dude, we just want the truth. | ||
We know that Oklahoma City was done by elements in our government. | ||
That's the only way you can say it. | ||
FBI, BATF, and every time there's an incident, every time there's a false flag, oh, they have something ready to ratchet it up. | ||
Oh, like the Patriot Act, which has given us the real ID, which is coming down the pipe, or the TSA, or this terrorism legislation, which I think was to give the death penalty to people, which I think they ended up doing to Timothy McVeigh, although there's some reports that maybe he was brought out, | ||
maybe wasn't dead. | ||
You know, there's all kind of interesting stuff about him. | ||
Also, I think it's the number 77 appears in a lot of these. | ||
He was in a 77-year car that they found him in, and there's some interesting things about the number 77 that go along with what's going on in Oklahoma City. | ||
But they said he had one accomplice who helped him build the bomb. | ||
It was a car bomb, and then it became a truck bomb. | ||
And they confiscated all the footage. | ||
People who looked at the footage saw a guy that looked like he was Middle Eastern getting out of the car, who we think is a former Iraqi military pilot. | ||
And so, of course, we're not going to get the real story from the government, but we get Bill Clinton grandstanding about it 30 years later. | ||
Stay tuned. | ||
We've got a great show coming up. | ||
I got a special video from Alex Jones coming up next talking about the Pope and his recent death. | ||
unidentified
|
back to the American Journal. | |
I'm your host, Rob Dew. | ||
We are going to go to our guest here coming up in the next segment. | ||
This is a short segment, but we do have breaking news from Alex Jones. | ||
And here's that report. | ||
Two huge events happened today. | ||
Pope Francis died and Klaus Schwab completely resigned from the WEF. | ||
Both of these are massive events. | ||
Now, it's not nice to talk bad about the dead. | ||
But the facts are, Pope Francis was the first Jesuit Pope. | ||
When they set up the Jesuits over 500 years ago to police the Catholic Church, it was expressly against the law, canon law, to have one be a Pope. | ||
Because you can't have the Praetorian Guard, that supposedly protect the faith of Jesus, then be the ones that would obviously put their guy in. | ||
But that happened. | ||
So all the globalists had to do was get control of the Jesuits, which they totally turned into a huge leftist, basically communist arm in the last hundred years. | ||
Then they had control of the Catholic Church. | ||
Like every other major institution has been taken over by the globalists. | ||
We're now in the process of humanity awakening and taking back the institutions all over the world. | ||
Catholics are great people. | ||
That's why the globalists have been targeting traditional Catholics, trying to outlaw them and say they're criminals. | ||
But if you really want to take over... | ||
The different large-sex Christianity, you've got to take over the leadership of it. | ||
So his death, when he promoted open borders and one-world religion and just criticized President Trump and other populist leaders and went on and on, is really emblematic of the overall collapsing globalist system we see. | ||
And I say, God have mercy on his soul. | ||
I'm not going to judge him. | ||
But most Catholics I know absolutely think that he was a terrible, terrible pope. | ||
Now, moving on to who we know is pure evil, and that is Klaus Schwab, the protege of Henry Kissinger, the mouthpiece of the UN and the globalists. | ||
Two years ago, they made the WEF co-equal with the UN under global government. | ||
I mean, this is massive. | ||
So six months ago, he resigned as the chairman. | ||
That wasn't enough. | ||
Then he resigned off the main committee. | ||
Now he's completely resigned from the WEF today. | ||
Because he's so hated and nobody wants to be part of the organization and it's falling apart. | ||
It was the preeminent globalist organizations a few years ago. | ||
You will eat the bugs. | ||
And now it is falling down in front of everybody and all of their policies around the world. | ||
Are being shut down and the US taxpayer money through USA and the EPA, hundreds of millions of years being cut off. | ||
And so the mouth of the New World Order is discredited, is falling apart. | ||
And Klaus Schwab just said two years ago he would never resign. | ||
Now he's completely gone out of the organization he founded. | ||
Be really the public face of the Bilderberg Group. | ||
This is a very, very exciting time to be alive. | ||
It's emblematic, again, an archetype, an omen, everything else that's happening. | ||
I'll be on the air today at 11 a.m. Central covering this. | ||
Another massive developments. | ||
A big judge in New Mexico got caught harboring an MS-13 operative. | ||
He's now resigned. | ||
The Democrats literally used MS-13 as their muscle. | ||
We're going to have major breaking news on that and so much more today at 11 a.m. | ||
But right now, Rob Dew at Infowars.com forward slash show and writer on X at Real Alex Jones is hosting the American Journal and covering it all. | ||
So be sure and check out the Infowars feed at Real Alex Jones. | ||
And thank you so much. | ||
All right. | ||
And that was Alex Jones. | ||
Breaking down what we talked about and giving it a little more effect. | ||
But we covered these. | ||
They're on Infowars this morning, breaking Pope Francis dead. | ||
Age 88, died just a day after making a frail public appearance on Easter Sunday. | ||
So they're able to, I guess, inject him with enough something to get him up there and meet with J.D. Vance. | ||
And Klaus Schwab resigns from the WEF with immediate effect. | ||
So he was going to do this sort of walk down. | ||
Backing out of the WEF, an organization that he'd been heading for many years now. | ||
But now he's just totally resigned. | ||
Probably some sort of sickness, and maybe he was dumb enough to take the actual vaccine. | ||
So coming up next, we're going to have an interesting discussion on what's going on in the world of mushrooms. | ||
And I'm not talking about psychedelic mushrooms. | ||
I'm talking about mushrooms for your brain, mushrooms for your body, and mushrooms to help even clean up the environment. | ||
And provide also a source of internet around the world. | ||
This guy Morgan's pretty interesting stuff. | ||
He's definitely on the cutting edge. | ||
So you're going to see him here coming up next. | ||
Thank you for watching the American Journal. | ||
Be sure you spread the word over on X right now. | ||
Go to at InfoWars, at RealAlexJones and re-spread those tweets. | ||
I just tweeted about it. | ||
So we're going to have a great time here. | ||
And then Alex Jones is coming up right after me. | ||
So it's a full day of the InfoWars. | ||
Good morning, everyone. | ||
Welcome back to the second hour of the American Journal, the place where you get the first day's worth of news. | ||
We just played an important report from Alex Jones talking about what the death of Pope Francis and the resignation of Klaus Schwab means in terms of the global world order and what's going to happen here in the future and how that all is relating to what's going on over the world right now because people are... | ||
Freaking out over what Trump's doing with these tariffs and how he's not backing down. | ||
He's trying to deport people. | ||
Of course, the Democrats do love MS-13. | ||
If you were watching over the weekend, I think one of the Democrat senators made it down and talked to the Maryland man who's the MS-13 gang member. | ||
I mean, he's got it tattooed on his knuckles. | ||
And, you know, he looked like they were hanging out in a hotel. | ||
Of course, you know, he was, oh, this is a photo op, and they pulled him out of prison. | ||
He didn't look like he had his head shaved. | ||
The guy looked like he'd been deported because he didn't belong in the United States. | ||
So we'll get to more of that later. | ||
Also, we have an article on Infowars that dwarfs COVID. | ||
RFK Jr. says autism is an epidemic, and I think they're saying it's like 1 in 31 kids now, and it's mainly... | ||
It hits the boys quicker than the girls. | ||
Of course, this is stuff we were been talking about for years. | ||
I was actually at Del Bigtree's birthday over the weekend, and I ran into at the trash compactor Andrew Wakefield. | ||
And so he was there. | ||
We talked a little bit. | ||
But the Maha movement is very alive and active, and these people are intent on... | ||
Really changing the health paradigm of what's going on in our country and in the world. | ||
And our next guest is doing the same type of, I think, research and innovation, but with mushrooms. | ||
Because there's thousands, millions of types of different funguses and mushrooms out there. | ||
And our mycologist, Morgan Rockwell, is going to fill us in on all this. | ||
You may have seen the Adult Swim Show common side effects. | ||
And you may think after you watch this interview that they're basing it off this guy here because there's not a lot of mycologists in the world, but Morgan Rockwell is one of them. | ||
Let's welcome him to the show. | ||
Morgan, how are you doing this morning? | ||
I'm doing great. | ||
Thanks for having me, Rob. | ||
Yeah. We appreciate it. | ||
No problem. | ||
I don't know if people know this, but I'll let them know now. | ||
I did a podcast last week with you. | ||
And we did about an hour and a half. | ||
I think you talked probably 80% of the time. | ||
And I don't even think you scratched the surface of the work you're doing and what it means. | ||
I think for, you know, the future of mankind is the way I see it. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
Yeah, why don't you break down what you kind of do, give people a gestalt, and then like all the different types of things mushrooms can be used for, not just... | ||
Tripping and putting on your salad, but all the different types of things. | ||
And then we'll get into some controversies about mushrooms. | ||
I definitely want to get into that with the poor bellow conspiracy. | ||
So take it away. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
I'm giving you the floor. | ||
Yeah, it was hard to go up after the Pope. | ||
So I work on the general study of fungi, which is known as mycology. | ||
The mushroom itself is what most people see, but there's a vast network of fungus across the whole planet called mycelium, which is the root tissue of fungus. | ||
And so what we work on at Microsoft is tapping into that fungal tissue in the ground and monitoring its activity with trees, bugs, animals, the soil. | ||
And the reason we do that is We kind of philosophically look at fungus as like the internet of the forest. | ||
There's a lot of documentaries talking about mycelium being like a brain tissue or a heart tissue or a nervousness of the planet. | ||
So what we want to do is monitor the fungus as it's growing in nature to really be aware of what's going on outside in the environment. | ||
You know, we're in a time where... | ||
People have abused the word climate and climate change and global warming and the name and cloture of how the environment is changing and interacting with people has been just abused. | ||
And so what we really want to focus on is that there's this tissue outside that is interacting with everything in nature and we should be paying attention to it. | ||
So what we do is we actually tap into it with devices like our machines that we build here and we utilize the fungal signals in the ground. | ||
To be aware of what's going on in the environment. | ||
And so the benefit of that is knowing if there's pollution or radiation or fire or some type of event like an earthquake or lightning, the mycelium responds to that. | ||
And so we build sensors to tap into that. | ||
We really look at mycelium as like an internet in the ground, a biological internet. | ||
And we build devices that plug into that like a USB port. | ||
And you've got one of those behind you, right? | ||
The little mushroom-looking thing is one of them. | ||
Yeah, this is my robot child. | ||
This is Mushroom 1. And the reason it looks kind of like a Star Wars droid is because that's really what it's supposed to be, is a ground drone or a droid that is made for the surface of the dirt. | ||
So you can plug into the ground, monitor the soil, monitor the air and the gases and the biological smells around the ground. | ||
The same way we have buoys in the water. | ||
And the same way we have satellites in space. | ||
We don't really have that type of technology on the surface of the ground on the planet. | ||
Billions of acres of Earth that is really not being paid attention to unless there's a satellite looking at it from space. | ||
And so that's really inefficient awareness. | ||
And one of the things we really focus on is actually building, you know, biological defense. | ||
And so we look at the environmental intelligence, you know, not artificial intelligence. | ||
But environmental intelligence, and we want to package that intelligence, what's going on in the environment as it's happening live, and give that to people who need it, whether they're the military, defense, farms, labs that need to know what virus, | ||
bacteria, fungus is actively alive out in the field. | ||
When you take something and you put it in a Petri dish and you bring it back to the lab to try to understand what it is, like viruses or bacteria or fungus, We know that people have taken advantage of that and abused that. | ||
But also that's not actual valid science in the sense that you're taking a gorilla out of the jungle to study it in the zoo. | ||
You're not really going to know anything about that organism the way it naturally behaves. | ||
And so we build things to monitor the environment in the environment, which is almost like putting a microscope out in the forest and leaving it there and connecting it to the internet. | ||
And I truly believe that once we have technology that's really interfacing with biology in that way, you know, people are building technology to plug into the human brain, and there's a lot of fear about connecting a computer to your brain. | ||
You know, Neuralink is maybe bringing paraplegic people back from walking, but maybe it could be used to turn you off. | ||
So there's this misunderstanding of how technology should, like, interface with people, and we touch our computer screens and we use our keyboards, but... | ||
Like, when the computer is part of you, what does that do to civilization? | ||
And really, as an experiment, we're trying to put computer out in the environment to see what we could do with that. | ||
Because the more live data we get from nature, the more aware we're going to be of weather, of climate effects upon our buildings and our civilization and our technology, early warning of earthquakes and fire and lightning and... | ||
And then like in the mindset of a military base, we're really trying to show the military, which now has this shift, can't talk about climate change. | ||
Because climate change has been a word that's been abused to do fraudulent stealing of money from the taxpayers. | ||
You know, there's this carbon credit stuff that people tried to say carbon is bad for you when it's literally what trees breathe. | ||
And so the environment has now a limited way to get funding on that research. | ||
And what we really want to pontificate is that the environment could be used as a weapon. | ||
It should be used for defense. | ||
We should be very aware of the environment. | ||
You know, we have signals intelligence, human intelligence. | ||
We should have environmental intelligence. | ||
So we do build these systems for the Department of Defense so that they are aware of what's happening in front of their military bases. | ||
The same way a farm should know what's going on in front of their field of crops. | ||
A situation where they know what's happening before, you know, it's too late. | ||
And that at all is built upon fungus, because fungus is one of the technologies in biology that we're really not taught about that much in school. | ||
And after COVID, we learned a lot about viruses, which is not, you know, valid. | ||
We didn't really get taught by the public what, you know, vaccines. | ||
Their structure, how mRNA was different than phages and all these different iterations of what viruses are. | ||
We barely know as a public much about bacteria other than for, you know, our drinks and our food and pickling. | ||
But there's a lot of fungus that's part of society making vitamin C, penicillin, which saved us from World War II. | ||
Fungus is used to make insulin. | ||
There's a lot of technology that we depend on fungus for and the public doesn't really know about that. | ||
So we're trying to also bring that education to the public because, you know, the ignorance of not knowing how viruses work can get abused and used against society like we saw after COVID. | ||
And so, you know, there's TV shows like The Last of Us showing fungus turning people into zombies. | ||
We don't really want that mindset that we don't know what this organism is and how to take advantage of it without it harming us. | ||
Yeah, it's all very interesting. | ||
You're talking about putting these sensors into the ground. | ||
I guess like a big 30,000-foot question would be, what would it cost to set these sensors up? | ||
And then you're saying these could also be places where you could tap into the Internet, so you'd essentially have Internet everywhere. | ||
Would that be a good thing? | ||
Would that be a bad thing? | ||
Who could be tapping into this Internet? | ||
If it was all over the ground surface of the continental United States? | ||
Yeah, like there's multiple ways to market that to the public. | ||
So like on the environmental mindset, being aware of what's going on in the environment, whether it's like air quality, I want to know if it's safe to breathe outside, pollution from a fire, things like that. | ||
You could get that on Google right now with your weather, the air quality number. | ||
And those are just measuring CO2 parts per million. | ||
That's not a really valid piece of data to tell you if it's healthy outside. | ||
You know, smog and fog and CO2, most of the world thinks CO2 is bad. | ||
And measuring how much is there is not really a good measurement on if it's healthy outside. | ||
And knowing if there's fusarium or black mold or bacteria blowing in the air. | ||
Or burning plastic from a fire that's burning houses down. | ||
The actual chemical content of the air is good to know. | ||
And we don't have sensors in the field doing that right now. | ||
So that's just a benefit to society if we knew what was going on outside in the air. | ||
In the ground, it's a little bit more particular. | ||
We want to know if glyphosates are leaking from a farm down into the river. | ||
We want to know if a chemical plant is leaking something into our water supply. | ||
We also want to know if radiation is leaking from somewhere. | ||
You know, I'm a big advocate for nuclear technology, but we have 40-year-old nuclear plants that maybe should be modernized and they're leaking into the ground. | ||
And so if we don't have things like CO2 detectors, volatile organic compound detectors, ground monitors, Geiger counters, those kind of sensors are so cheap now that they should be outside just so we know what's going on. | ||
That would just benefit civilization as a whole. | ||
The interconnected internet capability wasn't even around 10 years ago. | ||
And even 5 years ago, it was very expensive to connect a device in the forest to a lab or a data center. | ||
Now it's cheap. | ||
And we could find benefit for that. | ||
It's not necessarily for the public. | ||
There's not millions of people walking around without cell phone service out in the woods. | ||
But when it comes to the Department of Interior, forest rangers, firefighters, the military... | ||
Having internet capabilities on the ground is really important. | ||
So there's definitely a use for that. | ||
Our goal is to understand what's going on in the environment and then providing that to who wants to know what's going on in the environment. | ||
One of the things is we will be living in a world, whether we like it or not, of drones and military drones and the things that Anduril and Palantir are putting together may be... | ||
Are the future of the warfare operational environment. | ||
So we'll see Lockheed Martin and Boeing and Raytheon get somewhat replaced with these more intelligent technology-like companies like Anduril that are going to put drones everywhere. | ||
And one of the things we want to do is make sure that we know what's going on in the ground. | ||
So we know what is happening when devices are flying around. | ||
A delivery drone, a military drone, a... | ||
Drone is going to be part of our ecosystem, self-driving cars and things. | ||
But to have something in the ground, monitoring the environment, interacting with those devices, creates a little bit more of an advancement where we're really aware of what's happening outside. | ||
Not knowing what's happening outside is just dangerous, in my opinion. | ||
And that's where we are today. | ||
So we're trying to fill that gap. | ||
The internet is broadcast from space. | ||
We have Starlink. | ||
Broadcasting the internet all the way out in the ocean. | ||
Now, using that internet is the point. | ||
We want to know what's going on in the ground, underground. | ||
We want to know what's going on underneath the forest canopy. | ||
I really do focus on the defense aspect. | ||
If we don't know what's going on underneath the canopy of the jungle or the forest, that's a gap. | ||
And our company is doing our best to fill that gap for our customers. | ||
But also, it's just going to improve the ability to know what's going on in nature. | ||
We could grow better crops and better medicine discovery and better food, all with the awareness of what's actually living in the environment as it's living and dying. | ||
Alright, let's shift now from, you were talking about the sensors and creating this sort of internet of things in the soil. | ||
Let's go to the different types of mushrooms that are out there. | ||
And their benefits. | ||
And then even talk about some of the stuff you've been working on. | ||
I think we were talking in the Abs in a Six Pack podcast. | ||
We were talking about the mushrooms you developed that are salt tolerant. | ||
So they could grow in salty areas. | ||
But kind of give us the whole background of that. | ||
And we've got a whole other half hour coming up. | ||
So we can really dive into things. | ||
But I just want to give people a good overview of what's going on. | ||
Okay, so, you know, most Americans, because we're unfortunately culturally deprived of the mushroom in our food source, we have the portobello, and that's all we really know. | ||
And then most everyone knows what the psilocybin mushroom is, the magic mushroom. | ||
But there are over 50,000 mushrooms that we have names and about 150,000 fungus that include yeast and mildew and mold that we have names for. | ||
So those are mushrooms, fungi. | ||
Yeast, mildew, that have purposes, so we gave them a name. | ||
We know what they do. | ||
But there's maybe 5 million or more mushroom and fungi that we've not even discovered. | ||
As an example, a mushroom shows up for a few minutes and the rain disappears. | ||
If no one was there in the forest to take a picture of it, bring that sample back to a lab, we may have seen a new species come and go, and it may not show up for weeks or months or years. | ||
And so there's a lot of undiscovered tissue out there. | ||
But we do know out of all of those mushrooms that there's about 50 throughout society and all of the planet. | ||
Many different countries have different mushrooms they use for food or medicine. | ||
And, you know, in the United States, you can maybe find 20 that are very popular, like at farmers markets or some special grocery stores. | ||
And so there's mushrooms that are really beneficial, but you don't see them, you know, at the normal grocery store, the big commercial chains. | ||
They just don't last on the shelf for a few days. | ||
And those mushrooms are really important. | ||
There's lion's mane mushrooms, which regrow brain cells. | ||
They have chemicals that cause nerve cell growth. | ||
And those two chemicals that do that are only found in the lion's mane mushroom, nowhere else on Earth. | ||
It's almost like JV Weld for your brain. | ||
And that's a very valuable mushroom, but you don't see it on the shelf. | ||
It'll rot in three days. | ||
You can find it at the farmer's market or... | ||
In powder and pill form on supplements. | ||
There's also mushrooms that I know that some of the stuff that Infowars has for nootropics, you know, chaga and reishi and turkey tail. | ||
Some of these mushrooms are known to help your immune system, help your gut health. | ||
Turkey tails have been studied to fight cancer and tumors. | ||
Agaricon have been found to fight viruses and cancer. | ||
And so there's a lot of different mushrooms that... | ||
Native American cultures and different Aborigine cultures use as medicine and have done so for thousands of years. | ||
But commercially, all we know is the portobello in America because it's packaged, it's frozen, it sits on the shelf for a year, and it's very easily consumable. | ||
But that's not necessarily the best mushroom for daily use. | ||
There's a lot of mushrooms that people put as coffee replacement, grind it up as powder, put in their hot water every morning. | ||
And those supplements are popular in the sense like we had very generic beer for 50 years, and now we have craft beer. | ||
And so we've had very generic mushrooms for 50 years. | ||
Well, now we're starting to get craft mushrooms in products and services. | ||
But that's not even the iceberg tip of what exists in nature. | ||
If you take away all the rock and all the water on Earth, 60% of all the biomass that's left is all fungus. | ||
So 40% animal, insect, human, and mineral, 60% is all fungus. | ||
The amount of unknown fungus out there is the thing to explore in biology. | ||
So we just barely got a new word for it as well, a funga. | ||
So we have flora and fauna, things that breathe and plant, and things that have hearts and lungs and things that have roots. | ||
Well, now we have funga. | ||
We have the third kingdom of nature. | ||
And so that was done so that researchers like us can get paid and talk about it and study it. | ||
You could get grants from the government for flora and fauna. | ||
Well, now you can do research from academia and grants for funga. | ||
And that means we get to discover what's out there. | ||
We only know a very small list of what's good for you, but there's plenty to discover still. | ||
Yeah, it's all very interesting. | ||
And, you know, I want to get into the Portobello conspiracy when we get back on the other side of the break. | ||
Yeah, sure. | ||
But we got about two minutes, 30 seconds left. | ||
Just do a quick gestalt of the mushroom you've developed to help clean up the Tijuana River that flows basically right along the border into California and how gross it is right now. | ||
Yeah, I was actually born in Imperial Beach, which is the last beach before the Tijuana fence. | ||
And I think it's an important thing to talk about because there's a lot of conversation about people coming across the border, and there's almost no conversation on a global scale about the pollution coming under the fence. | ||
And that was a beach I grew up on, and now it's so toxic that you cannot go in the water, in the ocean. | ||
There's cyanide, cadmium, and sulfates blowing in the air because the dust is blowing off the ground. | ||
And so we found that the oyster mushroom, which is a mushroom that you could actually eat, and it's a really good food source protein, it bioaccumulates metal out of the ground, and it also breaks down hydrocarbons like oil and plastic. | ||
So this mushroom will literally eat plastic and rubber and oil. | ||
And what we found is there's some samples of this mushroom growing up the river, which is right next to a Navy helicopter base. | ||
And so what we want to do is show that this tissue can actually clean the pollution. | ||
The problem is down on the beach, where the ocean meets the river, there's a high amount of salinity in salt. | ||
So salt really is not good for DNA and metabolism and life. | ||
Salt kills living things. | ||
And so what we want to do is figure out how... | ||
Marine life has interfaced with salt and so what we're doing is we're trying to make this mushroom survive in that high salinity. | ||
But right now in our lab we're taking the mushrooms that we found in that environment and we're training them like a dog by giving it salt and adding every weekly iteration of that tissue with more salt. | ||
Eventually we get a mushroom that survives on the beach on driftwood and plants near the salt water. | ||
And if that is a success experiment, then we now have a mushroom that will eat plastic and oil on the beach. | ||
It will pull metal out of the ground on the beach in high salinity areas like the desert and the oceans. | ||
And that shows that we can take mushrooms and use them as tools. | ||
And make them a utility, not just a food and a medicine. | ||
This is really a whole untapped kingdom, as you're calling it now, funga. | ||
And we're going to have more with Morgan Rockwell when we get back. | ||
You can follow him on X at Nodefather. | ||
You can follow me at DewsNews, D-E-W-S-N-E-W-Z. | ||
We got more American Journal coming up. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back to the American Journal. | |
Breaking news, if you haven't heard already, we've covered it a few times already, but Pope Francis has died on Easter Monday. | ||
And there will be nine days of mourning, which are going to be observed, during which time Pope Francis will be buried. | ||
And the Papua Enclave will begin to select a successor. | ||
There's going to be 250 cardinals from around the world will travel to Rome for the secret ballot, in which a maximum of 115 can vote. | ||
And when you see the white smoke coming up the chimney, you will know. | ||
That a new pope has been selected, and we'll let the controversy begin on who that guy is and what his past is. | ||
I think it was the one before Pope Francis. | ||
I think he was actually a Hitler youth, from what I remember. | ||
And he's still alive, too. | ||
That's even more interesting. | ||
Yeah, Ratzinger. | ||
Pope Ratzinger, as Leo Zagami would say. | ||
But, in fact, if you really want the deep dive on the Pope, that's a guy you should check out and follow Leo Zagami. | ||
We've interviewed him several times. | ||
Met him in Rome, actually. | ||
And he took us around to some actual places. | ||
There's a lot of sovereign little enclaves, just like a building in the courtyard. | ||
It'll be a sovereign nation in Rome. | ||
And we were going into these things and walking out, and he was just flashing a... | ||
A badge to get us in and out of these places. | ||
Very interesting fellow. | ||
But he'll have probably the best information on the new Pope and what you can find out from there. | ||
Going back to our guest, Morgan Rockwell of Microsoft.com or Microsoft.org, sorry. | ||
And his website is mycodow.com. | ||
And you can also follow him on Nodefather on X. And we're really getting into what's going on in the mushroom world, sort of a new frontier. | ||
You think we've discovered everything on this Earth. | ||
Well, we don't really know much of what is on the bottom of the ocean, nor do we know much about what 60% of the Earth is made up of, which is these fungi networks that are all underground that travel through the Earth, sort of like little boring machines. | ||
And they're all processing messages and talking to each other and analyzing the environment. | ||
And now the work that Morgan and his associates are doing is to try and basically tap into this network that's already there and get readings on it to be able to use them for things we need, like growing the best crops, | ||
finding out what minerals are in the soil, what needs to be added. | ||
If there's radiation, there's toxins. | ||
And we were kind of finishing up on a project he's working on where he's trying to develop these saltwater-tolerant mushrooms to help clean up the beaches in Southern California where the Tijuana River, which you guys might be able to pull this up, | ||
I think the sewer main, the main sewer main, is broken in Tijuana. | ||
And so it's just raw sewage basically just flowing out into the ocean. | ||
And who knows when that's going to get fixed. | ||
That doesn't seem to be a huge problem, as it should be, but you're working on it. | ||
Morgan, did you have anything else you wanted to add on the mushrooms, the oyster mushrooms that you're working on? | ||
I would definitely talk for days about this Tijuana issue. | ||
I think it's important, but to sum up the situation, Tijuana has grown. | ||
Massively, mostly because of American expatriates that don't want to pay high rent in California. | ||
So they move down to Mexico and drive back to San Diego for work. | ||
And so it's exploded from a million to 10 million citizens just across the border. | ||
And most of them are Americans that have left and people from around the world. | ||
The plumbing system of Tijuana was not built for that. | ||
And so what happens is when 10 million people use the bathroom, the sewage system can't handle that. | ||
So they just open the floodgates and it runs down the river. | ||
The river actually goes under the fence in San Diego and runs right up against what is called the Navy Helicopter Capital of the World. | ||
It is where almost all Navy helicopter pilots are trained. | ||
And it's a large Navy base right on the fence. | ||
And so the river runs past that Navy base out into the ocean. | ||
And then it moves past the city of Imperial Beach about a mile. | ||
And on the north end of Imperial Beach is the Special Warfare Command Base, which is where every Navy SEAL in the United States is trained and does their BUDS training on the beach. | ||
Last year, for the first time ever, almost 100 days of training was canceled because of the high amount of pollution. | ||
We're actually seeing Navy SEALs lose training time because of this situation. | ||
So it's not just an environmental issue. | ||
It's a national security issue and it's a military issue. | ||
And so that's one of the reasons we're tackling it is not just because There's no food sources down here. | ||
It's not like this is polluting a farm or something, but it is polluting military bases, vital military bases. | ||
And so that's one reason why we focus on that. | ||
And the concept of taking a mushroom to clean the environment is really not a new thing. | ||
It's that if it's produced as a service in this way, that would actually be used for national defense. | ||
There's more attention and focus on why you would want to do that. | ||
The idea of taking a mushroom and kind of training it like a dog to survive different food source or a different environment means that now we can look at these mushrooms as tools and we could train them just like dogs. | ||
And we could have a German shepherd do this and a poodle do this. | ||
And so naturally the organism does its own thing and we just want to showcase that these are tools. | ||
If we didn't do this, this pollution would just get worse. | ||
The government is... | ||
Attempting to put money into this treatment plant, which is very bureaucratic and takes years, but no one has any plan other than us to pull the actual toxins out of the ground. | ||
And if we didn't have this mushroom that did it naturally, we'd be very limited on the ability to do that. | ||
So it's just an idea that if we can do this this way, there's many other mushrooms that we can take and use as tools. | ||
And that's one of the biggest things with mycology is that it has a lot of potential. | ||
It's underfunded. | ||
We're doing everything we can in the cryptocurrency world with decentralized science to fund mycology and not depend on the government or academia or grants because that's all gatekept by big pharmaceutical companies and big farms and big food companies. | ||
And so what we want to do is ensure that these experiments and this research and the tools get done. | ||
But they also don't turn into some monstrosity like Monsanto, where people are mutating the organism and taking possession of its IP and then using it to take advantage of society. | ||
So we've learned a lot of lessons as a species about how biotech works, how plants and pesticides work. | ||
We know that glyphosates are bad and we should not be spraying pesticides or GMO-ing crops with pesticides in them. | ||
I always tell people that DuPont probably was a better GMO company than Monsanto because they just wanted to make big corn and big rice. | ||
And we had the pesticide GMO company pushed upon us. | ||
So depending on how this technology gets educated to the public changes the outcome. | ||
And we do have TV shows talking about fungus turning people into zombies. | ||
And then we have a cartoon that you mentioned that really oddly looks like it was based on people like me. | ||
That the pharmacies don't like the mushroom people because a mushroom may prevent a pharmacy from making money on the patents. | ||
We could find medicine and drug in mushroom and you can't patent an organic tissue like that. | ||
So there's a lot of, you know, what we would go down the conspiratorial route and then the history is that mushrooms have been here forever and mushrooms are probably the oldest organism on earth that's been making the dirt out of the rocks. | ||
And every religion and every culture has talked about mushrooms. | ||
You could go look, speaking of the Pope, all over the Vatican and find mushroom stuff. | ||
You go down the ancient aliens route and you will find mushrooms everywhere. | ||
So it's important to know that that's part of our culture. | ||
And as a technology society, we should, in my opinion, be using it as a technology. | ||
So if you were to apply this as a technology, say you have a field of... | ||
Of raw sewage mixed with oil and, you know, just sort of like you look at the side of the Himalayan mountains, a bunch of plastic everywhere. | ||
You think the Himalayan mountains are nice and clean, but it's actually pretty disgusting all the garbage they leave up there. | ||
And since there's no, you know, garbage trucks, it just stays there. | ||
But like, say you got a football field worth of this type of toxic waste and you're able to, you know, develop these mushrooms that go in and eat this stuff. | ||
How would you apply this? | ||
How long would it take to clean a field up like this? | ||
And so if there's oil and plastic and rubber, oyster mushrooms will eat that. | ||
They'll eat wood, they'll eat cardboard. | ||
And so if there's something there that that fungus will eat... | ||
It will start growing a mycelium network and eat all of that tissue. | ||
Once that food source is gone, the mushroom is triggered to grow an actual fruiting mushroom. | ||
And that is just to create more spores to blow in the wind and go somewhere else, find more food. | ||
So you can literally just spray spores, which are trillions of spores in the air every day. | ||
You're breathing millions of spores every minute, whether you like it or not. | ||
It's just part of the Earth ecosystem. | ||
And so if you have a specific spore that does something like that, it will find food. | ||
If it doesn't find food, it just lingers and blows in the wind until it does find food. | ||
And so oyster mushrooms are not a harmful mushroom to us. | ||
We eat them. | ||
They're also like, they eat nematodes. | ||
They're like going to break down things in the ground. | ||
They're just the natural fertilizer makers. | ||
And so to have that specifically targeted at pollution, like on a football field full of oil, within a matter of weeks, All of that oil is gone and it's turned into sugar because sugar and oil and plastic are all hydrocarbons. | ||
And the mushroom doesn't care. | ||
It just breaks the hydrogen and carbon apart and uses it. | ||
And then we have a now fruiting body mushroom. | ||
Now, in the case of pollutants with metal, it will pull the metal out. | ||
We want to take those mushrooms out of the ground, harvest them, incinerate them. | ||
And now we're using them like mining. | ||
We're pulling the metal out of the ground. | ||
We just don't want that metal to go back into the ground. | ||
That is like... | ||
To me, a very Star Trek feature tool where we use fungus to mine, to clean. | ||
It's naturally doing its thing, but we figured out how to train it. | ||
Like a wolf naturally doing its thing, we turned it into a dog. | ||
And I feel like we could really domesticate mushrooms, and the oyster is a great example because it already does. | ||
It already has teeth. | ||
We just have to train it to be our teeth. | ||
Train it where to look. | ||
Yeah. All very interesting. | ||
I want to go to a clip real quick because I want to talk about the portobello conspiracy and what's going on. | ||
I guess big mushroom. | ||
There are some big corporations out there that depend on this particular mushroom. | ||
It's everywhere. | ||
I don't really like the taste of portobello mushrooms, but I do like shiitakes. | ||
But it's interesting. | ||
After watching this and hearing you talk about it, I think I know why I don't like portobello mushrooms. | ||
So let's roll that clip now. | ||
It's from The Joe Rogan Show. | ||
What are the negative effects of this? | ||
unidentified
|
This is an explosive area of conversation, and it puts my life in danger. | |
So I reserve the right not to answer your question. | ||
Whoa! I didn't expect that. | ||
It puts your life in danger talking about portobello mushrooms? | ||
He's looking at me silently. | ||
I will respectfully move on. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
So that was Paul Stamets, who... | ||
Who's created the Stamets stack, which is a nootropic designed to help you think better and think more clearly. | ||
But he won't even talk about portobello mushrooms. | ||
He is quiet about it. | ||
You say you'll talk about it. | ||
Absolutely. Why are people afraid to talk about the negative effects of portobello mushrooms? | ||
Well, I'll give Paul credit. | ||
Paul has been the biggest advocate for mycology, and he also told the Department of Defense that we needed to protect the forest in North California because there were organisms in there that could help us fight things like anthrax and other biological weapons. | ||
And so he got the Defense Department to actually pay attention to fungus in the early years, almost 15, 20 years ago. | ||
So he's very keen on that, and the reason he couldn't talk about that... | ||
It's because mushrooms like portobello's have hydrazine inside them. | ||
And so what that is is a carcinogen. | ||
It's also a staple of making rocket fuel. | ||
And so a human being drinking gasoline is not good. | ||
A human being drinking rocket fuel, hydrazine, is not good. | ||
If you're eating lots of portabellos, you're consuming hydrazine. | ||
Now, every mushroom has chitin in its cell walls. | ||
It's the same material crab shells are made out of. | ||
So that's sometimes why mushrooms kind of hurt your stomach. | ||
There's a lot of chitin in there. | ||
You've got to cook a mushroom. | ||
You don't eat them raw. | ||
Your stomach doesn't like chitin. | ||
But the hydrazine is way worse. | ||
Hydrazine is a rocket fuel. | ||
And so the problem with that is... | ||
You know, we know nitrogen fertilizers, when you buy large amounts of fertilizers, you may get the ATF showing up at your door because that could be used to make an explosive. | ||
If the biggest mushroom producers on Earth had, you know, the public aware that they had a source of rocket fuel, which, you know, it's not the best rocket fuel, but it is rocket fuel inside their tissue, there may be a lot of regulatory nonsense they would have to do with the ATF because it is... | ||
considered an explosive. | ||
So there's probably a lot of companies that don't want people to know that. | ||
And I'm sure Paul has interacted with enough, a mushroom growing facilities and farms, cause he has one himself that that would destroy those businesses or put them under a regulatory capture. | ||
And, uh, you know, that's why he didn't want to talk about that. | ||
Um, I'm in the business to talk to mushrooms and teach mushrooms and interact with | ||
And that's a very important thing to know. | ||
Because I have plenty of people asking me, as a subject matter expert, what mushrooms should I eat? | ||
And I always tell them, don't eat that mushroom. | ||
Even though it's freely available, it's not good for you. | ||
It's a secondary decomposer. | ||
It breaks down dead things in the ground. | ||
The mushrooms that actually break down the trees and grow on wood, those are more likely to have the chemicals that cure cancer and fight brain cell decay and improve stomach health. | ||
The wood is the primary decomposers. | ||
Those mushrooms growing on the ground, they're doing their job. | ||
They're breaking down things in the ground. | ||
And so those mushrooms are not to be hated. | ||
They're not to be demonized. | ||
You don't want to go burn all the portabellos to the ground. | ||
You just probably shouldn't be eating them. | ||
That's just not a good staple for human consumption. | ||
And then that kind of knowledge makes that business get harmed. | ||
So there's an economic benefit. | ||
And in the free market, those mushrooms should fail, in my opinion. | ||
Shiitake and maitake and chanterelles and truffles and cordyceps, those mushrooms should succeed because they're better for you and they're worth more. | ||
And so the cheap mushroom wins in America because it's the corporate way, you know? | ||
And that needs to change. | ||
Just like a craft beer is a little more expensive than a Coors Light, what one is probably better for your health in this sense, you know? | ||
There you go. | ||
And I guess with the taste, it depends on who you ask. | ||
Here, some people enjoy Miller Lite beer. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
And people will enjoy portobellos forever. | ||
But, you know, if we're going into this future, even with our government, that we should be really aware of what's going on in our body. | ||
And maybe we're going to remove fluoride from the water. | ||
And maybe we're going to remove a bunch of, you know, potassium and preservatives from our food in our schools. | ||
Well, maybe we should really be removing portobellos from our grocery stores as not the only mushroom. | ||
We should make some room for the mushrooms that regrow brain cells. | ||
We should make some room for the mushrooms that are better protein source like oysters and mushrooms like cordyceps that oxygenate your blood and wake you up. | ||
And maybe that's better for people than drinking coffee sometimes. | ||
So there's options out there. | ||
And that market is huge. | ||
That's what most people get introduced to mushrooms is consuming them. | ||
And that's an important thing. | ||
But what also is missing is the high-tech Star Trek world. | ||
Actually, Paul Snamets is named a character in Star Trek because they made a warp drive use fungus and spores. | ||
And it's very biotech and high-tech, but that's the point, is fungus is not just food and medicine. | ||
It is a technology. | ||
And our advocate that we've had for many years, Paul, is even, like, iconified as a Star Trek character now because it is technology. | ||
And that's really what we need to focus on is showcasing that it's a tool. | ||
We can interact with it. | ||
We have modern technology and sensors. | ||
We use things like AI to understand those signals. | ||
We use things like Bitcoin and decentralized science to fund those things so we don't depend on grants and academia to approve our science. | ||
We're in this decentralized science world now where we could just do experiments and we don't need to ask permission. | ||
And we also want the public to know. | ||
The data owns some of the IP. | ||
We want people to know that this is what we're doing as a scientist and be very transparent about it because we just saw that the government did very non-transparent things with viruses and it just shook the society and it caused death and harm. | ||
And if we don't repeat that and we do a very different way of showing bacteria and fungus could be used as a tool, which they already are. | ||
Then the public doesn't become afraid of these organisms, which are in our gut and in our lungs every day anyway. | ||
And so we have to become a little bit anarchic in the science world, the way it's been done, and be a little more rebellious. | ||
I worked on Bitcoin in the early days, and that mindset of being rebellious against the bank is what made it successful. | ||
In the scientific community, being a little rebellious is the only way we got good science done. | ||
The amateurs need to be rewarded. | ||
And, you know, I was an amateur. | ||
Paul Stamets was an amateur. | ||
Darwin was an amateur. | ||
You don't need to be, you know, wearing a lab coat to be a scientist. | ||
And so what we're trying to do is give these tools to the public where now anyone can learn from nature. | ||
Anyone could interact with fungus and bacteria and plants and insects. | ||
You know, we want that Pokemon world where you're out there just interacting with all the organisms. | ||
If you don't do that, then something scary like The Last of Us happens and then fungus creeps up on you and infects your crops. | ||
And we don't want that anymore. | ||
And I have a strong mission to give mushrooms technology, the radio. | ||
Uh, data, news like this, give them money, uh, spread them to Mars one day with Musk so that we can make soil out of that dead planet. | ||
There's a lot of potential of mushroom. | ||
And the problem is when you say mushroom, it's either psychedelic or it's portobello. | ||
And I would love to see that change because obviously mushroom is part of our culture. | ||
There's art and movies and TV and music all based on mushroom. | ||
It's important, you know? | ||
And if we don't give it its proper light in society, then it goes bad. | ||
We do not want something in the viral world, what happened with COVID, to happen with fungus. | ||
And I feel the only way to prevent that kind of ignorance is to talk about it until the cows come home. | ||
Most people didn't know what a vaccine was, how it worked, what mRNA or DNA was when COVID happened. | ||
No one understands the difference between a phage and a coronavirus. | ||
A lot of that biology vocabulary is not part of, you know, the common man and woman. | ||
And so I feel fungus is really actually going a little farther than virus because we do have TV shows and cartoons and video games about fungus. | ||
So the word mycology is being pushed on HBO right now for common side effects and The Last of Us, which is great. | ||
But there also needs to be a little bit of reality and humble us back down to ground, like literally plugging the ground into our computers so we know what's going on. | ||
Touching the ground and smelling the ground and touching those mushrooms and trees. | ||
Otherwise, we don't know what's going on. | ||
You know, I put mushrooms that were poisonous in front of people and like, look, you can touch it. | ||
It's not going to hurt you unless it goes through your liver. | ||
You even put a piece in your mouth and chew it and spit it back out. | ||
It's you've got to have that knowledge like our ancestors did. | ||
Otherwise, nature will hurt you. | ||
You could eat a berry in the woods and it could kill you if you don't know what you're doing. | ||
And so there's this like mycophobia needs to get wiped out. | ||
And having a machine that looks like a mushroom from Star Wars really helps a lot of kids because I've presented this to a lot of kids. | ||
They're not afraid. | ||
It's definitely going to get them interested in what's going on around in their environment. | ||
I want to show you this clip real quick. | ||
You were talking about The Last of Us. | ||
NYPD chief files a lawsuit against NYC councilwoman who bit him during a protest. | ||
This is a Chinese woman. | ||
Her name is Susan Zong. | ||
And she actually bites the NYPD chief. | ||
Right on the arm. | ||
Now you gotta look for mycelium and see if this is the beginning, you know? | ||
This could be it. | ||
I mean, in New York, so it would be in a city situation. | ||
How would mushroom, where would they grow in the city? | ||
Would they just grow right on the trees there that are on the sidewalk? | ||
Yeah, there's definitely mushrooms growing in Central Park out of the ground. | ||
There's mushrooms growing on the pipes underneath that large underground part of New York City in the moisture. | ||
Mushrooms will be growing on spaceships in the future to feed us. | ||
There's definitely mushrooms growing in every corner of New York City. | ||
Every city has fungus. | ||
Every crack between the sidewalk has fungus in it. | ||
It's just a matter of, is it cold? | ||
Is it wet? | ||
And is that wind going to make a mushroom want to come out and glow spores? | ||
But fungus is everywhere. | ||
It's all over you. | ||
You're breathing it. | ||
You're touching it. | ||
And I think that's what's important, is we should realize that's part of our Earth. | ||
And let's interact with it, learn it, understand it, take advantage of it, use it. | ||
And I really want to see the mushroom become as domesticated as the cat, the dog, and the corn. | ||
Because I think it's important for civilization to move forward. | ||
And not making portobellos as ubiquitous as they are now, I think, is also something you're saying, to mainly find some other alternatives to that. | ||
Yeah, we've got to give the other tissue, the millions of tissue, a little more of a spotlight. | ||
So go eat lion's mane, go eat cordyceps. | ||
And I'm glad to see, like, some of the stuff that InfoWars puts out there even has fungus in it, which is good. | ||
We need more of that. | ||
It's a whole new world, as they say. | ||
Thank you for joining us, Morgan Rockwell. | ||
He's the head and CEO and chief science officer of Mycosoft. | ||
You can follow him at mycosoft.org, mycodal.com, and Nodefather on X. Thank you for joining us, sir. | ||
Looking forward to all your work. | ||
Yeah, thank you for having me. | ||
Yeah, I appreciate it. | ||
Big time. | ||
All right, we'll be right back. | ||
One more hour left of the show. | ||
Welcome back everyone to the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host Rob Dew. | ||
We're going to have our guest here in studio in the next segment and I want to go to this RFK video talking about something I was talking about earlier about how autism is the new epidemic. | ||
But also I'm going to open up the phone lines 877-789- 2539-877-789-2539. | ||
The lines will be open while we have our guest in here. | ||
He's well-versed in the news, but we're also going to be showing you a new product that can help you in the info war. | ||
Find out different things because half of this thing is mining old content to show people, hey, we were talking about this before. | ||
So let's go to RFK now and then we'll have our guest. | ||
I'd have to wait two years to react. | ||
We don't wait two years to react to a measles epidemic or any kind of infectious disease. | ||
We shouldn't have to do that for diabetes or autism. | ||
The ASD prevalence rate in eight-year-olds is now one in 31. Shocking. | ||
There's an extreme risk for boys. | ||
Overall, the risk for boys of getting an autism diagnosis in this country is now 1 in 20. And as high in California, which has the best data collection, so it probably also reflects a national trend, | ||
1 in 12.5 boys. | ||
And most cases now are severe. | ||
So about 25% of the kids who are diagnosed with autism are nonverbal. | ||
Non-toilet trained and have other stereotypical features. | ||
And it's time for everybody to stop attributing this to this ideology of epidemic denial. | ||
Instead of listening to this canard of epidemic denial, all you have to do is start reading a little science because the answer is very clear. | ||
And this is catastrophic for our country. | ||
This is a preventable disease. | ||
We know it's an environmental exposure. | ||
It has to be. | ||
Genes do not cause epidemics. | ||
They can provide a vulnerability. | ||
You need an environmental toxin. | ||
The amount of money and resources put into studying genetic causes, which is a dead end, has been historically 10 to 20 times the amount. | ||
To spend by NIH and other agencies to study environmental factors, to study exposures, to study external factors, and that's where we're going to find the answer. | ||
These are children who should not be suffering like this. | ||
These are kids who, many of them, were fully functional and regressed because of some environmental exposure into autism when they're two years old. | ||
And these are kids who will never pay taxes. | ||
They'll never hold a job. | ||
They'll never play baseball. | ||
They'll never write a poem. | ||
They'll never go out on a date. | ||
Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted. | ||
And we have to recognize we are doing this to our children. | ||
It just takes a little common sense. | ||
If autism, if the epidemic is an artifact... | ||
A better diagnostic criteria or better recognition, then why are we not seeing it in older people? | ||
Why is this only happening in young people? | ||
This is coming from an environmental toxin. | ||
And somebody made a profit by putting that environmental toxin into our air, our water, our medicines, our food. | ||
And it's to their benefit to normalize it. | ||
To say,"Oh, this is all normal. | ||
It's always been here." But that's not good for our country, and it's not good for the press to not be more inquisitive, to not be more skeptical. | ||
And within three weeks, and probably we're hoping in two weeks, we're going to announce a series of new studies to identify precisely what the environmental toxins are that are causing it. | ||
This has not been done before. | ||
And we're going to do it in a thorough and comprehensive way, and we're going to get back with an answer to the American people very, very quickly. | ||
And we're going to look at all the potential culprits. | ||
We're going to look at mold. | ||
We're going to look at food additives. | ||
We're going to look at pesticides. | ||
We're going to look at air and water and medicines. | ||
Yeah, we know what it is, though. | ||
We know it's going to be vaccines. | ||
So we'll be right back with our guest, and you're going to learn all about it. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal. | ||
This is the third and final hour. | ||
After this, it'll be the Alex Jones Show from 11 to 3, and then the War Room rounding out the day from 3 to 6. So 10 hours live every day. | ||
Why? Because you out there demand it. | ||
You out there ask for it. | ||
And how do we fund ourselves? | ||
Well, we fund ourselves with the great products from the Alex Jones Store. | ||
And I'm sure my next guest will want to comment on some of these as we go through them. | ||
But we have the Shilajit gummies. | ||
You've had the Shilajit capsules, which are power-packed with some amazing ingredients, including Irish sea moss. | ||
Let's see. | ||
I had them here. | ||
That's the problem with having too many papers. | ||
I see why Harrison uses his laptop. | ||
Burdock root, black cumin extract, ashwagandha extract, pyroquinoline quinine, bio-PQQ is what it's also known as, boron citrate, coenzyme Q10, and black pepper extract. | ||
The black pepper is what helps everything absorb better. | ||
If you take turmeric, Make sure it has black pepper in it because that'll help it absorb better. | ||
But that's the Shilajit capsules. | ||
We also have the Shilajit gummies. | ||
The same Shilajit that we get out of the mountains up in the Himalayas is where this stuff comes from. | ||
They don't really know exactly what it is, although I think it's like petrified life matter that they're mining out and then sort of turning into a way we can Absorb it into our bodies and get those peptides and those minerals because we need a lot of minerals in our main diet. | ||
There's like 180 essential minerals. | ||
And so you need lots of little trace minerals. | ||
And a lot of those are in Chilogy. | ||
And the ones that aren't in Chilogy are in Irish Seamoss. | ||
So it's a one-two punch. | ||
We also have the Irish Seamoss Ultimate Seamoss Gummies. | ||
Which have the burdock root bladder wrack extract, spinach powder, and the pectin in addition to the Irish sea moss. | ||
So check those products out. | ||
Also sign up for the subscriptions. | ||
If you really want to support yourself and support what we're doing, you get a subscription. | ||
It gives us monthly income coming into the InfoWare coffers. | ||
But it also keeps you in your best health. | ||
And we try to give it to you at the best price. | ||
So doing that, it's 50% off. | ||
So you can get the best price you can by doing 50% off with the subscription service. | ||
So check that out. | ||
When you're on the product page, you can look and it says subscribe. | ||
Boom, you hit that, you're getting it for 50% off, and it just keeps coming once a month. | ||
So it's the way to go. | ||
Now, I want to introduce my next guest. | ||
We have Scott Armstrong joining us. | ||
And he contacted me, oh, it was last year sometime? | ||
unidentified
|
It was last year. | |
It might have been almost a year ago. | ||
And I'd heard about this product called the Clip Genie because the No Agenda show uses a version of this. | ||
But it hadn't been adapted into video. | ||
It was mainly with an audio stream. | ||
So you working with the programmers have taken... | ||
The Alex Jones Show and ingested all these things into the Clip Genie, which is basically a search engine. | ||
It's a search engine for the Alex Jones Show. | ||
Yes, and so if you go to alexjones.clipgenie.com, you can search past episodes. | ||
These are all based off the rumble streams that are out there, but you can search. | ||
Word search, different things Alex has said. | ||
And I think we started the rumble sometime in 2020. | ||
Yeah, it's like late 2020. | ||
I think it goes back to late 2020, early 2021. | ||
So yeah, I mean, we got a lot to get into with it because I'm super pumped. | ||
We really do. | ||
And you're fast talking, so you're ready to go. | ||
I'm ready to go, baby. | ||
So give people a rundown of the clip, Jeannie, how you got involved with it and how it works, basically. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
Well, thanks for having me, Rob. | ||
Shout out to the crew and everybody, man. | ||
This is awesome. | ||
Yeah, so in the morning, everybody, all you No Agenda people, as a part of the No Agenda community, I utilized this thing called Bingit.io, which Sir Deanonymous created, which basically allowed for the audience to type in a word or phrase, | ||
and you can basically pull it up, and it will show you any time that word or phrase or topic was mentioned in the entire 17-year history of the No Agenda show. | ||
Now, no agenda is audio only. | ||
And so I was like, I approached Sir Deanonymous, the developer. | ||
I said, hey, Dean, is there a way that we can maybe adapt this to video podcasts as well? | ||
And he says, leave it to me. | ||
He came up with it, got all the technology in place. | ||
And then I was like, well, can we take it a step further? | ||
Can we figure out a way to export clips now from where, you know, you find the clip you want, but now we need to export a clip to put it on social media and whatnot. | ||
A short clip. | ||
A short clip. | ||
You're not taking a three-hour show. | ||
Exactly. You're taking a section of that show. | ||
Exactly. And so, shout-out to Dean, man. | ||
He figured it out. | ||
Unbelievable. And so, at that point, we had a working product, and I was like, okay, now we need to get a test case going. | ||
And so that's when I partnered with the Grand Theft World podcast. | ||
So, shout-out to Richard Grove, forensic historian. | ||
We were able to bring in their content. | ||
Into the Clip Genie. | ||
And that's when we launched the original video version, gtw.clipgenie.com. | ||
Because again, Richard Grove has a massive archive of research going back lots of years as well. | ||
And so that has been a great test case for any topic you want. | ||
You can find it there too. | ||
So anyway, and then I was like, okay. | ||
Out of all the shows in the world, the one that I would want to create a Clip Genie for the most is The Alex Jones Show. | ||
Right? So, in working with you guys, you know, I know you guys have had a lot going on. | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
And so, you know, you've kind of gave me the keys to say, just do what you got to do using what's publicly available. | ||
And so that's when we basically pulled off of the Rumble channel. | ||
And so the way it works is, you guys, you go to alexjones.clipgenie.com. | ||
Go do it right now. | ||
Type in any obscure word, phrase, anything, and you can find if Alex Jones has ever said it. | ||
You can click on... | ||
That, and it'll pull you into the episode. | ||
You can basically... | ||
Yeah, let's do one here. | ||
Yeah, search for New World Order. | ||
Yeah, we're going to do New World Order right there. | ||
New World Order. | ||
That's going to be a lot. | ||
That's going to be a lot. | ||
There it is. | ||
These are all the times Alex Jones mentioned. | ||
It was quick, too. | ||
Exactly. It pops right up. | ||
If you click on View Show, so just pick one at random. | ||
There you go. | ||
And see where it says that timestamp right there, the hyperlink? | ||
You can click that, and it will play the episode from that spot. | ||
And so... | ||
And then, so this is where it gets really crazy. | ||
Okay, this is where it gets really crazy. | ||
So if you highlight the text on the transcript there. | ||
That you want. | ||
That you want. | ||
You want a little bit before, a little bit after. | ||
A little bit right there. | ||
So let's say that's the section you want for your clip. | ||
And then you press the clip button there, the little film reel button on the left. | ||
And it's the same thing with mobile. | ||
If you're on your cell phone, you can highlight it using your native highlighter. | ||
Now, we do have a little captioning tool built in so you can specify the number of words you want on the caption. | ||
I just do the standard five, whatever. | ||
Scroll down a little bit and you'll hit the prepare clip button. | ||
And then after that, it will give you the option to download the clip. | ||
So we need a shot of Shazam or whatever his name was. | ||
Shaq was doing the genie and boom, he makes the clip. | ||
And so then we have this clip that I guess is going to show up right there. | ||
And then you download. | ||
Oh, you download it. | ||
You can download or share from there. | ||
So you can share social media directly from there or you can download. | ||
But if you guys want to pipe in the audio, we could actually play that clip. | ||
That was New World Order. | ||
We could try anything with that. | ||
So there he is in the big studio. | ||
It's like Sarah Connor and the Terminator reaches her hand out and says, come with me if you want to live. | ||
I mean, it really is. | ||
It doesn't mean come with me. | ||
It's like, look, this is the only way out, and it's classic freedom. | ||
Let's go. | ||
Let's do it. | ||
So there you go. | ||
I saw it in the caption. | ||
Yeah, I saw the caption going, but it didn't look like the clip was. | ||
It actually played that part of the clip. | ||
Let's try another one. | ||
Let's try Klaus Schwab and see what pops up. | ||
There's probably going to be a lot popping up there. | ||
He just resigned today. | ||
Fully from the WEF. | ||
He said it was going to be kind of like a wind-down. | ||
But now he's like, nope, I'm out. | ||
And you can read that article on Infowars. | ||
Klaus Robert Zines from the WEF with immediate effect. | ||
The board appointed. | ||
Oh, and I just want to let people know. | ||
There's no rehearsal here with any of the Clip Genie stuff. | ||
We just, boom, we're throwing it at the guys. | ||
They're doing it live. | ||
We got callers calling in. | ||
Maybe the callers will have some suggestions. | ||
We could just clip Jeannie the hour away as we're going through this to get people into it because Alex does this a lot during the shows. | ||
He's like, I must have said it a hundred times that they were going to use surface-to-air missile. | ||
In fact, we're going to do surface-to-air missile. | ||
Put that one after Klaus Schwab and then we'll show him surface-to-air missile. | ||
I'm always watching Alex. | ||
He's always like... | ||
Chase, Chase, I mentioned it, like, last Monday. | ||
Like, get on there and figure out where I said that. | ||
I'm like, Alex, we have the technology. | ||
You just type it into the clip genie. | ||
The clip genie. | ||
And so, now I want to get it to the point where Alex goes... | ||
Clip Genie that. | ||
Go clip Genie that. | ||
There you go. | ||
It's for the production crew here, but it's for all of you guys out there in the world too. | ||
All of the info warriors out there. | ||
This is what Alex talks about all the time. | ||
It's like we've given you the information and now set yourself free. | ||
You have to use it. | ||
You have to empower people. | ||
You have to send it out. | ||
It's a team effort. | ||
It's how all of you in the audience force multiply Alex's message out there, social media, take it and run with it. | ||
This is a powerful tool. | ||
For you guys. | ||
So you guys did Klaus Schwab? | ||
Webby, you can pop in my ear. | ||
Yeah, just play it there. | ||
Yeah, let's just see what happens. | ||
We got to eat our bugs. | ||
And now we're just supposed to be good little happy globalists and eat our bugs and live in our little coffin apartment and not have a car and not be able to have kids because we don't have any money and live in austerity while the globalists fly around in their luxury jets above us. | ||
No, I don't think so. | ||
You can take Your crickets and your mealworms and your maggot milk Bill Gates and Klaus Schwab and shove it up your satanic ass. | ||
So there you go. | ||
And then burn in hell. | ||
And what year was that? | ||
When was that clip from? | ||
It'll tell you where the episode, if you go back to... | ||
Yeah, but anyway, it'll tell you what episode it was. | ||
Yeah, yeah, it'll tell you the date. | ||
And then you could go back and go, oh, that's when he said that. | ||
And then he said five other things, too, that really makes it... | ||
There it is, Thursday show, 4-3-25. | ||
So that was pretty recent, actually. | ||
Yep. But this goes back to 2020. | ||
You're also working on going back even further. | ||
Yep. You know, as you get this. | ||
So you have to actually scrape the actual show and put it into a different server. | ||
Correct. So we have redundancy with all the video files. | ||
So in order to get the system to work, we actually have to download the MP4s for ourselves. | ||
We store them on our hard drive. | ||
So, you know, it's another redundancy for you guys as well. | ||
But also, that's where the chip... | ||
The clip generation engine pulls from so we have to have a copy of the mp4 file on our servers to do the clip generation and then once we have the mp4 then we run transcription and that's how we have the searchable database and so between the two you know it's a pretty robust system and also like a It's combining a bunch of AI tools together to really take it to the next level. | ||
Exactly. Utilizing AI tools for good. | ||
This is a good use application for fighting the information war. | ||
Exactly. And this technology has only been around for, what, maybe three or four years? | ||
It hasn't been around for long. | ||
It's new technology. | ||
We were talking to Morgan Rockwell earlier who's using what's old technology, the fungus, but using it in a new way to To, you know, clean up the environment, to analyze the environment, to monitor the environment, and also, you know, create better food sources. | ||
Totally. And create soil, do all kinds of things with it. | ||
So we really are hitting on the cutting edge of technology as, you know, we're almost halfway through 2025 now. | ||
Exactly. Yeah, we're using it for good. | ||
And another thing I want to point out to you guys, too. | ||
So if you go to the Clip Genie website, and then also on where you do the search, where it shows you the search results, you'll notice there's a banner ad. | ||
For the Alex Jones store. | ||
And it's really important that you guys see that because, you know, this is something that we've taken on ourselves and obviously the download store. | ||
The MP4 files and also to do the transcription. | ||
There's cost to that, which we're like, we're going to do that. | ||
But what we want to do is we want to send people to Clip Genie. | ||
And if you guys get value out of Clip Genie, then you can return that value by doing what you already do and click the link to the Alex Jones store from Clip Genie because we have our affiliate code attached to that. | ||
And so we plan on helping pay for all those expenses using your guys' purchases at the Alex Jones store. | ||
Which also go to us. | ||
So this is like, Alex Jones talks about a 360 win. | ||
It's like a 540 win. | ||
This is like a quadruple 360 win, whatever that is. | ||
So it's like you're using the tool. | ||
It'd be a 1080 win. | ||
A 1080 win, dude. | ||
It's like a 4K win. | ||
I had to do my skateboarding chops right there trying to figure out three 360s. | ||
Exactly. It's a 1080. | ||
And then there's also a donate button because what we're planning on doing, you guys, is because we have the Rumble channel going back to about 2021. | ||
Early. 2021, late 2020, something like that. | ||
I was trying to search as far back as I could to see how far back I can go. | ||
But we want to partner with the team here and pull in the entire Alex Jones archive, okay? | ||
Going all the way back as far as we can. | ||
I'm talking the YouTube era, you know, because these guys have the YouTube. | ||
But that's going to be a massive expense on our part, so we want to encourage you guys to use the tool for, number one, share the clips on social media. | ||
Number two, make sure that people get excited about the whole clip genie thing. | ||
Tell people how they can find it, too. | ||
Tell people how they can use it, and then... | ||
You guys just do what you already do and go to the Alex Jones store, make a purchase through the Clip Genie site, or make a donation, and then we're going to work on bringing in the full archive. | ||
So can you guys imagine how powerful of a tool that is? | ||
If we had the entire history of the Alex Jones show in a searchable database with the ability to make clips just like that on any topic, like... | ||
This will topple the new world order. | ||
I like to think in those terms. | ||
Like, this is a powerful tool. | ||
It's a power that soon will be realized. | ||
All right, let's go to the phones. | ||
Let's go to Dodo Bird from Texas wants to talk about the Daily Mail article that I covered, I think, back in the first hour about the lady, you know, we're starting to see more articles about people and they're admitting that they're COVID vaccine injured, which we couldn't get for a while. | ||
But go ahead, Dodo Bird. | ||
Welcome to the show. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks, Rob. | |
I call myself Godeberg because I don't forget, so I thought it was funny. | ||
The article says all the signs that mean you could have a COVID vaccine entering. | ||
And I just want to remind everybody that Dr. Robert Redfield gave testimony to Congress on March 8, 2023, and he implicated the Department of Defense in running the COVID operation. | ||
He said the military took over the lab, and essentially that's how it all started, with the military, Department of Defense. | ||
So, Robin, maybe you can help me. | ||
I have trouble reconciling. | ||
That on Friday the 13th in March of 2020 was when Donald Trump, not Biden, Donald Trump issued the executive emergency order for the COVID shutdown of our country. | ||
So a lot of these people that ran this operation against us are still in power, and I just don't know how to reconcile that. | ||
I wanted to ask your opinion. | ||
Well, I think some of it is getting reconciled. | ||
You do have to look at... | ||
So Donald Trump was not a scientist. | ||
He wasn't the guy. | ||
He was making the decisions. | ||
He was making the final decisions. | ||
And I think he stands by his decisions, whether they were right or wrong. | ||
He was getting fed bad information. | ||
And yes, he's a guy that comes from the system somewhat. | ||
He's been in the system. | ||
He's given money to the system. | ||
And I think overall he trusts the system and he trusts the doctors. | ||
Being a germaphobe. | ||
Now, I'm not making excuses for him. | ||
He did do warp speed, and that was a Department of Defense operation because that's what, when the warp speed happened, he gave that power over to the military to speed things up. | ||
Because what he was being told was, sir, it's going to take three to four years to make a vaccine. | ||
We have to keep everybody locked down until then. | ||
He's like, no, we're going to get the country back going. | ||
So if it's a vaccine that's going to help... | ||
You know, who of us in this room even knew about mRNA technology before they started talking about it with the COVID vaccine? | ||
Nobody, I would say. | ||
There were very few people who knew about it except those scientists who had been working on it. | ||
And so they had this ready. | ||
They had this in waiting. | ||
So he was kind of ambushed with it, but it was like, sir, we've got the solution if you just do this. | ||
And he goes, okay, let's do this. | ||
And so he thinks of it as a great thing. | ||
I forget the name of the country artist. | ||
It wasn't Toby Keith. | ||
But we played a video of it last, about, I think it was last week. | ||
unidentified
|
John Rich. | |
John Rich, who was, Trump asked him, he goes, how come they're booing me when I talk about the COVID vaccine? | ||
Because we all know that it's not good. | ||
Everybody who's a Trump supporter knows what's going on. | ||
And he told him, I hope to God what he said was accurate because he told him exactly what everybody else was thinking, that they've either had somebody who they knew got injured or they got injured themselves. | ||
And now we're seeing the media. | ||
Finally come around to admitting that people are getting injured by it. | ||
Before it's like this mystery syndrome or we don't know why people are dropping dead. | ||
You're going to see that. | ||
That's going to evaporate this year. | ||
And I hope Trump goes after these people with accountability. | ||
In his lab leak piece that he put out, he's got Fauci listed in here showing his pardon from Biden. | ||
And I think they're going to go after him. | ||
I think they're going to go after Peter Daszak. | ||
They need to go after these people. | ||
We need to see these people. | ||
Held accountable for what they've done. | ||
But I do agree that the thing about the Department of Defense kind of running it isn't very well known, and that's probably something we could do better, that this was a government-military operation coming together to make all these vaccines, which is probably why they had so much crap and contaminants in them, | ||
because the military's not known for its cleanliness. | ||
It's known for blowing things up and killing people overall. | ||
Well, they killed a lot of people. | ||
They definitely did. | ||
I'll give you the last word on that, Dodo Bird. | ||
What did you think of my explanation? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, yeah, I can't disagree with the way you explained it, but we've known for many years. | |
In 2016, I was at the state convention in Dallas, Texas, telling everybody that I could meet to watch the movie Vaxxed, because that showed how bad it is. | ||
The system itself is so destructive, and that's its mission, is to be destructive. | ||
I delivered to both of my children at home on my bed. | ||
I stripped the sheets, put a shower curtain down, laid my wife down, delivered our children at home because we were both in agreement that the medical system is so destructive. | ||
We are better off doing it at home than. | ||
Yeah. Yeah. | ||
Yeah. I don't know. | ||
We can't let up. | ||
We can't go, oh, we've won because Trump got in. | ||
We have to stay more focused and then really gain those grounds that we weren't able to do under a Biden administration. | ||
I think we've got a way more open administration than we did before. | ||
So we just, we can't go, oh, Trump's in, we can go back to sleep now. | ||
We can go have barbecues and go drinking beer. | ||
No, we have to redouble our efforts. | ||
So it's good that you're out there asking those questions because we need to keep holding people accountable. | ||
I do it every week. | ||
Cash Patel puts, oh, we got some gangbangers off the street. | ||
I'm like, hey, what about the client list, bro? | ||
Where's the Epstein client list? | ||
You know, let's look at all these people. | ||
What about the people who started the COVID pandemic? | ||
And, you know, we can't let up. | ||
We have to keep the pressure on. | ||
We know the pressure's working because Dan Bongino talks about it every week. | ||
Oh, we're still doing something. | ||
You know, people's patience is running as it should be. | ||
We're getting close to the 100 days. | ||
I've always felt we can't really judge, you know, Trump in the first two months. | ||
You got to wait 100 days, see where he's at. | ||
Then you got to look at 200 days and see where the things are. | ||
I think he's done a lot of great things this round, way more than he did in his first presidency. | ||
And I think we're seeing more accountability. | ||
I pray to God that they are setting things up to really go after these people. | ||
And if they don't, boy, there's going to be a bigger reckoning. | ||
Can you imagine that? | ||
If they don't go after these people, what it's going to do leading into the midterms? | ||
Because you know he has to do something. | ||
You have to start perp-walking people. | ||
Or people are just going to say, well, you know, we'll just give it back to the dim tarts and see what they can do. | ||
Because they're going to do a terrible job, but we don't care anymore. | ||
Because you're not working for us. | ||
So he's got to definitely turn the gas on going into the midterms. | ||
But personally, I like what he's done a lot of things in the first 100 days. | ||
There's very few things I would see change, but we do need to start seeing some high-level perp walks. | ||
Absolutely. I mean, this is like my one single issue is the COVID vaccine. | ||
I mean, this is my bread and butter. | ||
This is what I've been reporting on and pushing back against. | ||
And really became an activist around like immediately. | ||
Like the second podcast I ever did was on vaccines back in early 2020 because we're like, we know where this is going. | ||
You know, and I've been very critical of Trump for years over this. | ||
And this is the one issue that it's like if he doesn't come correct on it. | ||
It's going to be a reckoning, like you said, like all of his supporters. | ||
And it's like, you know, I just... | ||
There's a reason he's getting all those booze out there. | ||
It's because people know. | ||
And we're sick and tired of having smoke blown up our ass. | ||
I mean, this isn't an attack on Trump. | ||
I want to see him do better. | ||
I want to see everybody do better. | ||
And we're going to hold him accountable. | ||
I'm not going to stop. | ||
So don't you stop out there. | ||
Use this clip genie, alexjones.clipgenie.com, to find the clips, to show people where we were right, to show them how we've been right for a long time, because this is what it's all about. | ||
We've got to intensify our efforts in the info war, and the time is now. | ||
Get your butt off the couch and start getting in the game. | ||
We'll be back with more. | ||
I'm from Scott. | ||
Actually, I think I play bass on that. | ||
Yeah, right? | ||
You're the bass player. | ||
It's called We Don't Need You No More. | ||
Yeah. Bunkedrecords.com, baby. | ||
Yeah, so, you know, you're kind of a jack of many trades. | ||
You're a musician. | ||
You're a podcaster. | ||
You're a researcher. | ||
And I would say you wear a lot of producer hats because you see how things work, but you're also technologically... | ||
Capable to work the back end a little bit. | ||
Probably not as capable as somebody like CJ. | ||
CJ's a master. | ||
And Dan over there. | ||
Dan did a great job. | ||
If you're watching the interview of Morgan Rockwell, just pulling up B-roll after B-roll. | ||
It's so unbelievable. | ||
It takes creating a system, developing it, and then honing your craft. | ||
And that's kind of what we're doing here. | ||
And then one of the tools you can use for this is alexjones.clipgenie.com where you can go. | ||
And if you missed the last segment, I'll give you a quick recap. | ||
You can search a phrase or word that Alex has said based on going back to late 2020 up to the present day. | ||
And then it'll bring up all the times he said it. | ||
You could find from a big one sheet of all the times he said. | ||
Then you could click on an individual show. | ||
It'll show you the different times he set it there. | ||
And then you can | ||
Yep. So if you're looking for him talking about, I think we said surface-to-air missile. | ||
Is this surface-to-air missile? | ||
This is Civil War. | ||
Okay, this is Civil War. | ||
All right, next I want to do surface-to-air missile because that was a big... | ||
Bone of contention here for a few days. | ||
In fact, we'll probably find the one where he says it over and over again. | ||
Surface to air missiles. | ||
Surface to air missiles. | ||
But he was talking about how they were going to use a surface to air missile to attack Trump. | ||
And that was one of the things he said. | ||
There it is. | ||
Surface to air missiles. | ||
But what was crazy about that is then you go and the guy who tried to get Trump at the golf course, who went to Ukraine back and forth, he was trying to buy a surface to air missiles. | ||
Yep. So, it all comes back to each other. | ||
We also have some callers on the line. | ||
Let's go to Wiley in San Diego. | ||
He wants to talk about RFK coining the phrase epidemic deniers. | ||
Go ahead, Wiley. | ||
Yeah, hey, Rob. | ||
Great job this morning. | ||
Hey, when the definition no longer fits the narrative, they just changed the definition over and over again. | ||
Republicans lack control over politically strategic narrative. | ||
Yep. And, you know, they've even allowed MAGA to become a dirty word. | ||
If they can remove the guilt of what you're doing, it becomes acceptable. | ||
Like calling the mRNA tech a vaccine or calling abortion women's reproductive health care. | ||
But now, RFK Jr. turned a Democrat accusation, like election denier or anti-vaxxer, into a strategic comeback with a statistic supporting it. | ||
You know, he's now calling the political science resistance epidemic deniers. | ||
I think that's magnificent. | ||
It puts an uncanny emphasis on their propaganda, finally using their Marxist-style verbiage against them. | ||
Yeah, and a lot of those words that they use against us are kind of spells, and they get them repeated over and over again. | ||
That's why you see these mainstream media compilations of they're using Maryland man over and over again. | ||
It's just a Maryland man. | ||
It's a Maryland man. | ||
What's wrong? | ||
You don't like Maryland man? | ||
Oh, you don't think Maryland man should be able to live in the United States? | ||
Well, Maryland man happens to be an MS-13 gang member who has been declared a terrorist organization. | ||
MS-13 and Trinidad have been declared terrorist organizations from the Trump administration. | ||
And so it's not Maryland man. | ||
He's a freaking terrorist, according to their new definition of terror. | ||
And these are the enforcement arm of the Democrat Party. | ||
That's why you had Nancy Pelosi say, these are God's children as well. | ||
Yeah, so these guys with the skull tattoos. | ||
Appreciate that, Wiley. | ||
I like that. | ||
Yeah, we have to use... | ||
And create the word space and the definitions to combat their black magic spells that they're trying to put all over the country through the mass media. | ||
Exactly. And then it's like, you know, if you're aware of the trivia method of learning and gaining information, you have grammar, logic, and rhetoric. | ||
And one of the things that they essentially do to destabilize everything is to attack grammar itself. | ||
Like, we have words. | ||
Words have definitions. | ||
Definitions have meaning. | ||
We can communicate to each other with those things, and we all know what we're talking about. | ||
But they love to deconstruct what the definition is. | ||
What is a woman? | ||
To discombobulate. | ||
And therefore, once you no longer have a logical definition of something, then it can be whatever you want it to be. | ||
And then the basis of fundamental learning, understanding, communicating is completely destabilized. | ||
And that's where they love to operate. | ||
So if we can... | ||
I'm not going to say do that strategy against them, but yeah, utilize... | ||
You have to recognize the strategy. | ||
Use it in a rhetorical way. | ||
Instead of messing with the grammar, use the rhetoric against them. | ||
This is a good example of that, for sure. | ||
Thanks for that call, Wiley. | ||
Let's go to Joshua in Georgia who wants to talk about the death of the Pope. | ||
Go ahead, Joshua. | ||
Hey, good morning, Rob. | ||
Actually, I'm going to call you Mr. Dude because I'm nasty. | ||
Man, I'm a suit guy, first of all. | ||
Your suit is pristine. | ||
I freaking love it. | ||
Oh, thank you. | ||
But the only problem is you either got to cut that hippie hair to match a suit or else put on a billabong shirt, you know, because you're a snowboarder. | ||
unidentified
|
But I digress. | |
I love that you're hosting this morning, man. | ||
I've been wanting to talk to you for a minute. | ||
What I want to talk about is this poke dying this morning. | ||
It's pretty big. | ||
Have you ever heard of the prophecy of St. Malachi? | ||
I might have. | ||
It seems sort of familiar, but I can't recall at this point. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
We'll see if Malachi's ever talking about it. | ||
Use the cleft gene. | ||
Is St. Malachi? | ||
Is that what it was? | ||
Yeah. Go ahead. | ||
Yeah. Okay, so he was an Irish priest in the 1100s, made a pilgrimage to Rome, and then had a vision of every pope. | ||
From that pope to the last pope. | ||
Okay. And Benedict was the last pope he predicted. | ||
Yeah. And then there's like an addition of Peter the Roman who, I can't, what's this pope saying? | ||
Anyway, he was actually from Italy, but he is from Argentina. | ||
Francis, yeah. | ||
Yeah, yeah, Francis. | ||
And who will feed the multitudes in a time of great tribulation, but will usher in the Antichrist. | ||
So I woke up to that this morning and I was like, I wrote an End Times book in 2013 that had a lot of like kind of underground prophecies and stuff like that. | ||
And I'm really looking really hard at what happens next. | ||
Who they're going to pick next. | ||
You know, everybody's got their bets and everything. | ||
But, you know, with everything else going on, you know, you've got Ezekiel 36, 37 about to happen with Israel against Russia, Gog, and Middle East, Magog. | ||
Everything is happening right now. | ||
All these prophecies are coming together right now. | ||
And, you know, everybody's like, well, you know. | ||
People predicted, well, this thing, you know, it's going to be now. | ||
It's going to be now. | ||
It's going to be now. | ||
But never in the history of the world has all these prophecies come together at the same time, all of them in an almost convergence, almost like God saying, | ||
Y'all better tighten up or else, you know. | ||
You better find God, is what I think is what's going on. | ||
And I think you're seeing that. | ||
When I went to Easter service, it had never been as packed. | ||
They had people out in the lobby area, and that was packed. | ||
They were running the air conditioners so hard, one of them started leaking in the ceiling, actually. | ||
So, I mean, I think people are seeing the seriousness of the times. | ||
They're seeing the information come out because a lot of these people, you know, were mainstream media addicts. | ||
And now they're starting to see, oh, wait, there's side effects to the COVID vaccine? | ||
I didn't realize this. | ||
And maybe that's why so-and-so died. | ||
We played the video earlier, the woman who had a baby die in the 80s from SIDS, and now she's hearing about SADS, which is sudden adult death syndrome. | ||
And we didn't have these words going on. | ||
You know, you had a heart attack and died, but, you know, there was a guy who drank and smoked and ate like crap. | ||
Now you're seeing people who are like athletes dying by the dozens, collapsing in the middle of football matches. | ||
Oh, they had these heart defects. | ||
Yeah, the heart defect was from the vaccine. | ||
That's why they have the heart defect. | ||
And we're slowly seeing that come out. | ||
And more and more and more, you're getting that, I think, greater awakening. | ||
Is it too late? | ||
I don't know. | ||
But one thing's for sure, we can't go, well, it's too late. | ||
We got to stop fighting. | ||
No, we don't stop fighting until the bell rings. | ||
That's it. | ||
We got to keep going. | ||
And if anything else, like this last few years, just like the evil is out in the open, you guys, at this point. | ||
It's undeniable that the forces of evil exist and they're abound in this world. | ||
And therefore, I think that's a powerful thing. | ||
That's the thing about it. | ||
The dark creates the light. | ||
You can't have light without the dark and vice versa. | ||
And if anything else, this has... | ||
Awoken in the whole of humanity like this, this powerful realization that there is a loving God and the power of Jesus and that there is a presence here on earth that is infinitely more powerful than whatever darkness is thrown at us. | ||
And so it's like, you know, regardless of who the Pope is, you know... | ||
Pray for his soul. | ||
I never looked to the Pope for guidance. | ||
Exactly, that's the whole point. | ||
Jesus says, there's no hindrance between you and your connection to God, to me and my connection to God. | ||
I can channel directly to God at any moment, all day long, and I don't need a Pope, or I don't need a preacher, or anybody telling me where that connection needs to be coming from. | ||
I pray for his soul, and I pray for... | ||
Peace going forward in the next election, you know? | ||
But it's like, to me, it's like my connection to God is like, you know, the most important thing. | ||
And it's what carries me. | ||
Like, just even being here today, man, I've been giving thanks all morning. | ||
I'm like, thank you, God. | ||
So powerful. | ||
You know, if the Vatican wants to do something noble, open up those archives to people to go in and research what's going on. | ||
Let us make a clip, Jeannie, of the Vatican archives, baby. | ||
Let's see what's really in the basement of the Vatican. | ||
All right, let's go to Campfire Quarry in Oklahoma. | ||
Let's talk about the COVID shot and human baby testing. | ||
Go ahead, Campfire Corey. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Hey, thanks for having me on. | ||
I also want to say that clip genie idea was an excellent idea. | ||
And thank you, Infowars, for your efforts to save humanity. | ||
It's historically notable. | ||
I'd like to go to a document that you can look up on Google. | ||
It's called BL125742. | ||
Forward slash zero. | ||
It's a FDA document that clearly states on page 7, part 6 and part 7, human baby testing. | ||
The drug is called Comirnaty, otherwise known as the Vax or the Jab. | ||
Yeah, otherwise known as the Vax or the Jab. | ||
However, this was approved in every state in America. | ||
This document is not secret. | ||
It's a public document. | ||
I've shared this document with many governors and many people. | ||
And it seems that, according to the Pediatric Heart Network, they have an open case study on myocarditis and periocarditis in infants until 12-31-2026. | ||
So I called my governor here and I asked him, hey, isn't this pandemic over? | ||
Can't we get this stuff off the shelves and start testing stuff back on lab rats, for instance, instead of humans? | ||
Well, I got crickets here in Oklahoma, and they're working on it, though, because they got some good people out here that are just figuring things out. | ||
I gotta say, I had a permission to slip to smoke cigarettes when I was 10 years old. | ||
I could take down to the store and get me a pack of cigarettes. | ||
Boy, they didn't have it figured out then, and they ain't got it figured out now. | ||
Well, we need to get this stuff off the shelves. | ||
We're not human lab rats. | ||
We're not industrial waste subjects. | ||
And RFK, you're doing a good job. | ||
I appreciate you. | ||
I'm kind of excited to be on. | ||
I really... | ||
You've been watching your show for a long time. | ||
I hope God loves and keeps every one of you people that listen and hear this. | ||
Don't forget, BL-125-742-0, page 7, subpart 6, subpart 7. And Alex Jones, this is for you, man. | ||
Yeah. Yeah. | ||
All right. | ||
Thank you for laying that on us. | ||
That's what it's all about. | ||
Coming with the documents. | ||
That's one of the things we've always prided ourselves on is showing people the actual documents, showing the sections that pertain to you. | ||
And there's actually a U.S. code where it allows them to experiment on us as long as it's for testing purposes. | ||
Exactly. So they could do anything they want to us as long as they say, oh, we're just testing. | ||
So they're able to do this legally. | ||
Because of the U.S. Code. | ||
And it's listed in there. | ||
You can actually read it. | ||
It's got an exception. | ||
The government is not allowed to test on the humans under their knowledge unless they inform them, if they just call it testing. | ||
There's all these little things, these exceptions that allow them to circumvent the law because it's all written by lawyers who just don't want to do good. | ||
So it's good to bring the documents. | ||
We showed it up on screen, so I hope everybody was watching that and reading it for themselves. | ||
And yeah. | ||
Take that page and go contact your governor. | ||
Contact your secretary of state and ask him or contact your main health official in your state and say, are you going to remove this? | ||
Why are we still doing this? | ||
I thought the pandemic was over. | ||
Why are we still having this on the shot schedule? | ||
I think it's going to get removed this year. | ||
I think when RFK comes back in September, he's going to release the results of his autism study. | ||
I think you're going to see a big change in the vaccine schedule. | ||
And, you know, for me and mine, We don't vaccinate. | ||
Yep, amen. | ||
Kids in the future, 100% unvaccinated, you will have to kill me first. | ||
That is the line that I will hold to the death, and that is my number one thing. | ||
Like, never. | ||
And yeah, it's very exciting times because we're seeing it fall apart. | ||
We're seeing it dismantling. | ||
We were just at Del Bigtree's house the other night. | ||
Yeah. Birthday party. | ||
That was so much fun. | ||
Yeah. Just like seeing the energy around it. | ||
And it's like, we're getting victories, you guys. | ||
We're getting victories. | ||
And it's because of this audience, because of this crew. | ||
It kind of really, a lot of it stems from this building right here. | ||
So much of it over the last 30 years. | ||
It's like, I don't care what you say about Alex Jones. | ||
Whoever woke you up was woken up by Alex Jones. | ||
I mean, that's just how it is, man. | ||
Yeah, that is definitely it. | ||
And I'll share something Del said to me because people were throwing out little speeches to him and whatnot. | ||
And I said, I went to a National Press Club event. | ||
I had no idea who Del Bigtree was. | ||
Didn't know him from Adam. | ||
And there's an event with RFK Jr. | ||
Robert De Niro, a couple other people, but Dale Bigtree was sort of like the keynote, kind of the emcee of the whole thing. | ||
And I thought he was more impressive than anybody else. | ||
And out of all the people that I interviewed, he was the one I wanted to go interview the most. | ||
We did this amazing 30-minute interview I got to put out again because it was on our old YouTube channel. | ||
And what's funny is he tells me, he goes... | ||
He goes, Rob, I thought it was the coolest thing in the world that somebody from InfoWars wanted to interview me. | ||
And here I am, a guy, you know, I'm from InfoWars, but I didn't see it as being that big of a deal. | ||
He thought that was the biggest deal that week. | ||
And so it didn't matter that Robert De Niro was up there talking about his, you know, vaccine documentary or RFK was up there. | ||
This is, you know, in the first term of Trump. | ||
So he was there on the sidelines, not mainly as a Democrat saying they wanted to look at this stuff and that, you know. | ||
Trump was supposed to put that vaccine commission together that he didn't do and have RFK do it. | ||
Well, now he's atoned for that. | ||
RFK's head of the NIH. | ||
RFK's really stepping out and going, he's taking the position of power and going, I'm going to help people. | ||
I'm not going to be a lackey for big pharma and whatnot. | ||
So we are seeing some good things, and we need to celebrate those victories because they're not being celebrated in the press. | ||
They're being downplayed in the press. | ||
So we need to be the press. | ||
We need to be the people's press and just let people know that there are victories happening. | ||
Yeah, and you will never shut the Infowar down. | ||
Never. You can try all you want, all your tricks, and it's only going to make the people in this building work harder and Alex's voice get louder. | ||
And I can't wait to see it, man. | ||
I love this. | ||
It's good. | ||
It's happening. | ||
All right, let's go to Hunter in North Carolina. | ||
Wants to talk about something going on at Chapel Hill. | ||
It says, protested University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. | ||
Yeah, that's where they were making the original COVID cane-of-function research was happening there with Ralph Baric. | ||
Go ahead, Hunter. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Rob. | |
You're doing a great job, man. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Glad to hear you. | |
Hey, you mentioned Dale Bigtree. | ||
He was one of the people that was most influential to me. | ||
I met him at Reawaken America Tour in Dallas. | ||
I think it was in 2020. | ||
Owen Schroyer spoke at that event. | ||
But anyway, I was one of the first. | ||
I was very early on in recognizing what the powers that be were up to with the COVID-19 vaccine. | ||
I think they have found a couple of snake venom bits in the COVID vaccine. | ||
So what he was saying actually is starting to come true, and especially his stance on tobacco. | ||
That information is starting to come out more. | ||
unidentified
|
Nicotine. Nicotine. | |
Yeah, nicotine can be a fantasy. | ||
I've tried it. | ||
I've had a real bad runny nose. | ||
Never had COVID. | ||
Never had a shot. | ||
Never will get a shot, just like the last caller said. | ||
But I think what Artis says has a lot of weight. | ||
But let me go back to Ralph Baric. | ||
Yeah. I came back from that Reawaken America tour, and I made myself some signs. | ||
Because like you were saying earlier in the show, you were like, man, people got to stand up and do something. | ||
And I felt like that. | ||
You know, I got to actually do something. | ||
And I'm a 55-year-old guy, just scrapping for a living, but I was like, hell, I can do something. | ||
So I made some signs, and I went up to University of North Carolina and stood outside of Ralph Barrett's lab. | ||
And held up a sign. | ||
I don't know if you have a picture of it. | ||
Yeah, we're showing it right now. | ||
unidentified
|
Cool. I'm not looking at it. | |
Yeah, that's me. | ||
I felt a little bit crazy doing it. | ||
Nope. That's awesome, man. | ||
unidentified
|
I did it about a half dozen times before I got, you know, protest fatigue. | |
But during that time, man, I'll tell you, two things happened. | ||
One time I got visited by the cops. | ||
And the cops were cool, but one of the cops, I got talking to him and he said, man, you really... | ||
Touch some higher-up's nerves. | ||
Yeah. That's when you know you're having an effect. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, you're over the target when you're starting to receive the flack. | |
And the second time, there was this thug-looking guy who rolled up in a little 70s sedan, a beat-up-looking car, rolled his window down, and slew just a 30-second harangue against me. | ||
All kinds of blasphemous. | ||
And telling me I was going to get killed if I didn't get the hell out of there. | ||
I mean, it was definitely an Antifa. | ||
Somebody that was sent by somebody else, you know? | ||
Anyway, I tried to do some protesting. | ||
I kind of ran out of gas. | ||
But it seems like we need to do some more. | ||
I'm really frustrated about a couple of things. | ||
With Trump and Operation Warp Speed, I kind of gave him a pass over the years on that. | ||
But now he's... | ||
He's done some things that are really alienating me again. | ||
I've been his supporter since 2015, but this whole push for anti-Semitism laws I think is the greatest mistake, even bigger than what he's done with Operation Warp Speed. | ||
And I wish he'd come out against that, but he's hired people that are really behind it. | ||
He's got a pretty face pushing this real ID. | ||
Christy, know him? | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
And hey, what we have to do is hold his feet to the fire, though. | ||
That's what we have to do is say, hey, we did, I think, two or three shows last week on the Real ID and where it's about. | ||
It's based on a UN program. | ||
And it has nothing to do with keeping people safe from terrorism, just like the Patriot Act didn't. | ||
And that came out at the same time. | ||
And there was hardly any discussion about what the Real ID means. | ||
Like, it's one thing to have a state ID. | ||
But then when all these things are talking to each other, and then anybody can get into these databases, that's where the problem comes, especially when they start tying it to a digital currency. | ||
That's your setup for a whole social credit system, and that's what this is the basis of. | ||
So we have to say no. | ||
We have to protest this, and I agree with you. | ||
We have to hold people's feet to the fire when they're doing wrong. | ||
Nobody's ever going to do 100% right what we think. | ||
The next guy after Trump... | ||
Not going to do it. | ||
It won't be as good, in my opinion. | ||
We need someone more radical than Trump, let's just say it. | ||
We could definitely use someone a little more radical than Trump. | ||
You know, and maybe that's RFK Jr., but we'll see what he's going to do. | ||
He came out and said, you know, anti-Semitism is something they need to look at in the NIH. | ||
And I'm like, why? | ||
Don't worry about that, bro. | ||
I wish we had another hour to get into this. | ||
Yeah, let's fix the vaccine and let's just... | ||
Let's just go after what the real problems are. | ||
People grousing at each other in the streets isn't going to stop the next pandemic. | ||
There's laws about hitting people. | ||
There's laws about shooting people. | ||
That's where it needs to stay. | ||
Because when you start telling people they can't talk about certain things, that's where you get a problem, and that's where you start to get all kinds of other problems that lead off that. | ||
So I'm with you on that, Hunter. | ||
So thanks for calling. | ||
We got a minute left. | ||
I don't think we're going to get to the other callers. | ||
Let's just give them one more plug on the Clip Genie. | ||
Yeah, man, you guys. | ||
Rob, thank you so much for having me here today. | ||
Like, crew, thank you so much, man. | ||
So, alexjones.clipgenie.com. | ||
Make sure you go test it out, and if you guys get any value out of it, please go. | ||
You can either make a donation or just shop at the Alex Jones store. | ||
The link's right at the top. | ||
Click on the Alex Jones store link from the Clip Genie site there, and that helps fund the Clip Genie. | ||
Like I said, we're going to try and pull the entire... | ||
Alex Jones archive going all the way back through the YouTube days, but we need your help to do that. | ||
So please either donate or shop at the Alex Jones store. | ||
Through the link at the top. | ||
And of course, get that information and get the information out. | ||
Yeah, that's the most important thing. | ||
And tell people how you did it because it's all about us spreading the word one Paul Revere at a time to really make the change that we want to see in this world because it's up to us. | ||
If you're waiting for somebody else to do it, you're going to be waiting for a long time. | ||
So you get off the couch. | ||
You get in the fight. | ||
Alex Jones is coming up next. | ||
Thanks for watching. | ||
unidentified
|
networks lie to you about what's happening now, | |
Infowars tells you the truth about what's happening next. | ||
Methylene blue is all the rage. | ||
But for my listeners, we've been talking about it for decades. | ||
But finally, they've got factories. | ||
They've got laboratories that are producing medical, pharmaceutical, USP grade. | ||
And so, our sponsor, thealexjonesstore.com, | ||
It has it right now. | ||
The very highest quality. | ||
I've taken USP grade before and they claim it's USP grade and it works great. | ||
Massive energy, clarity, focus, no letdown. | ||
This is 10 times better. | ||
I'm actually scared of this. | ||
I've seen Robert F. Kennedy Jr. take three droppers on Air Force One. | ||
I took half a dropper and I'm bounced off the walls hours later. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, we have the very best methylene blue I've ever had at the lowest price, and it funds the Infowar, a total 360 win. |