Speaker | Time | Text |
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We are looking at 560,000 Americans who have died of this vaccine. | |
That's worse than the Civil War. | ||
We've gone through. | ||
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We're now on our third presidential administration. | |
No one in the White House has told America. | ||
That we've been through a civil war and we did it to ourselves. | ||
One of our businesses is that we offer group life and disability insurance to employers. | ||
And we are seeing right now the highest death rates we have ever seen in the history of this business. | ||
Not just at One America. | ||
The data is consistent across every player in that business. | ||
And what we saw just in third quarter, we're seeing it continue into fourth quarter. | ||
Is that death rates are up 40% over what they were pre-pandemic. | ||
Just to give you an idea of how bad that is, a three sigma or a one in 200 year catastrophe would be 10% increase over pre-pandemic. | ||
So 40% is just unheard of. | ||
They said it isn't going to work and it's going to cause massive heart attacks, heart swelling, blood clots. | ||
Infertility, strokes, the list goes on and on. | ||
I'm one of the few people, along with my 3,500 experts, who have looked at the Pfizer documents. | ||
And I can tell you, they knew from a month after the rollout that they did not work. | ||
So the reason I say mass murder with such calmness is that if, and not only that, the FDA knew, because at the bottom of these documents it says FDA confidential. | ||
The FDA has custody of these 50,000 documents that Pfizer was forced to reveal. | ||
So they knew that they didn't work. | ||
They knew three months in it. | ||
1,200 people were dead, four of them the day they were injected, and they kept going. | ||
They knew in April of last year that children's hearts were being damaged a week after the injection, and they kept going. | ||
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We're up to over 1.6 million reports in VAERS in the context of these products. | |
The numbers keep going up. | ||
They're still going up. | ||
President Donald Trump miraculously signed an executive order banning federal funding for gain-of-function research. | ||
The order prohibits U.S. funding. | ||
for this research in countries of concern like China and Iran, as well as in nations with inadequate oversight and empowers U.S. agencies to terminate funding for any biological research posing risks to public health or nationality. | ||
It also pauses domestic research involving infectious pathogens until stricter transparent oversight policies are developed, aiming to reduce lab-related incidents while preserving U.S. innovation in biotechnology. | ||
Extensive work over the last four and a half years is that COVID came from the University of North Carolina, which is the leading researcher on beta coronaviruses working with the U.S. government on a set of grant proposals that identified putting in The viral change that created SARS-CoV-2. | ||
It's a grim truth. | ||
It's ugly. | ||
It's been hidden from view. | ||
The reason I mention it in this context is we don't have any global governance that is effective right now to control the manipulation of dangerous pathogens like the manipulation that created the pandemic. | ||
And when it happened, And officially it took 7 million deaths. | ||
But probably, if you count all of the deaths associated with COVID, it was probably closer to 20 million deaths. | ||
Even when that happens, it's never properly investigated. | ||
It's covered up. | ||
However, according to Tom Renz, President Trump's executive order doesn't go far enough and still permits dangerous gain-of-function research to continue under certain conditions. | ||
Renz warns that whoever advised this decision is undermining the president, echoing the misguided advice of Fauci from Trump's first term and should be removed immediately. | ||
Gain-of-function research must be banned entirely, no exceptions, especially when the AI touted by the Trump administration for rapid cancer solutions could eliminate... | ||
The need for the hazardous experiments that have left a death toll wake that the country has still been... | ||
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It's Wednesday, May 7th, in the year of our Lord, 2025. | |
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
I think it's time to blow this scene. | ||
Get everybody and the stuff together. | ||
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Okay, three, two, one, it's jam. | |
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, welcome. | ||
Welcome to the show. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, coming to you live this May 7th. | ||
It promises to be a revelatory day. | ||
We're awaiting a couple announcements today. | ||
James O 'Keefe, for the past week, has been in hiding. | ||
Waiting for today, where he will release some sort of bombshell story. | ||
I have no idea what it is. | ||
He is sort of James O 'Keefe's living dead man switch if something were to happen to James O 'Keefe. | ||
So he'll be releasing whatever bombshell investigation he's been working on today. | ||
And we can go to a short video of Alex Jones kind of teasing that here in just a second. | ||
But also Donald Trump has been making some cryptic announcements about earth-shaking news to be shortly unveiled. | ||
And that may be happening today. | ||
We're awaiting a lot of different exciting things today. | ||
And let's go first to clip number 20. And we won't watch the whole thing. | ||
The whole thing's about a little over 20 minutes long. | ||
But this is Alex Jones giving a little teaser as to what James O 'Keefe is coming out with next. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
So in the words of Tony Montana, there's two things I don't break. | ||
That's my word and my balls. | ||
And you got my word. | ||
I will continue on with nothing but total integrity. | ||
Because that's the most valuable possession in my life. | ||
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All I have in this world is my balls and my word. | |
And I don't break them for no one. | ||
Do you want to stay? | ||
Bye. | ||
Late last week, one of the greatest investigative journalists of all time, James O 'Keefe, released a cryptic, very short video. | ||
We'll play in a moment where... | ||
He said, this is basically the most dangerous thing I've ever done. | ||
I'm going into hiding. | ||
I text messaged him that night and said, please reach out to me. | ||
The next day he called me and said, Alex, you're the only person I'm telling you this. | ||
I'm telling you this for my safety. | ||
And then he laid some incredibly disturbing information on me. | ||
We're going to talk about more of that in a moment. | ||
But first, here is his first video that he put out. | ||
Letting people know what was coming, that he was obviously dropping something very dangerous. | ||
And then today, he released a short, very cryptic little trailer that foreshadows what he is going to release tomorrow, May 7th. | ||
Tomorrow is the day. | ||
First, here's both those clips, and I'll come back and respond. | ||
unidentified
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I'm going dark. | |
I'm not suicidal. | ||
unidentified
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Pray for me. | |
This one scares me, guys. | ||
unidentified
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They can't suicide us all. | |
Now, most of you know I don't shy away from covering dangerous information. | ||
But it doesn't mean I still Don't have my adrenaline racing a little bit with all the different potential developments that are going to come out of what is about to be released. | ||
But in the final equation, we're about to review piece by piece the short cryptic trailer and the images that are there. | ||
I have a responsibility to tell the truth and to... | ||
To expose and to work with those exposing bad deeds, corruption, you name it, regardless of who is involved in it. | ||
I mean, quite frankly, my parents are great people, some of the most moral people I know, but if I found out my dad or my mother was doing something bad, I would try to stop it, and if they were hurting innocent people, I would expose it. | ||
And of course, that's hypothetical. | ||
My parents are great people, so I don't have to deal with that issue. | ||
Without revealing too much, because James asked me not to reveal the specific details he gave me, just to let folks know this was very serious, and he told me some of the information he saw would know how serious it was. | ||
I was like, yeah, that is very, very serious. | ||
He didn't tell me a ton of information, but what he did tell me was very, very thought-provoking, to say the least. | ||
And then now that I've seen this little short trailer, it gives me a much more specific idea about what is about to be released. | ||
And James would not tell me specifically who in the Trump administration that this information was connected to. | ||
He would just say it was not Trump, thank God, or his family. | ||
And so then, obviously, I went on air. | ||
After I talked to him that morning on Friday and said, hey, I talked to James. | ||
He's got two big stories breaking. | ||
He actually told me about a third that's huge as well. | ||
These others are so big, it's overshadowed. | ||
And I just simply said, listen, he's not being dramatic with the video you just saw earlier where he said, hey, I'm going into hiding. | ||
This is dangerous stuff. | ||
And people think of dramatic things like somebody saying, hey, I'm going into hiding. | ||
This is really dangerous. | ||
Please pray for me. | ||
As, oh, that's dramatic. | ||
Well, stuff in TV and entertainment and fiction where people pose as something being dramatic, that's acting. | ||
But when you're a real man in the arena or a woman in the arena doing incredibly dangerous investigative journalism like he's done, I mean, I think we really take it for granted because so many people are like, oh, this is dramatic. | ||
Oh, this is a drama queen. | ||
Oh, yeah, right. | ||
It's going to be so huge. | ||
When he's got a track record more than anybody of breaking dangerous bombshell bombshell bombshells that have been game changers. | ||
I mean, I start thinking about the attempted Pentagon coups and the Pfizer head of mRNA admitting that they're creating viruses in a lab to release new variants to make billions of dollars off their so-called vaccines. | ||
I mean, hundreds of giant stories. | ||
Dozens of total game changers. | ||
So that's just a little teaser from Alex Jones from yesterday. | ||
So again, that news, whatever it is, is slated to be released later today. | ||
And as Alex points out, James O 'Keefe does have a track record of incredibly bombshell stories. | ||
In fact, probably the most disappointing or frustrating thing about James O 'Keefe's investigations is that they haven't, every one of them, ended in gigantic... | ||
You know, nation-reeling scandal and trials and criminal charges because he has unveiled, he has exposed dozens of people in positions of power just admitting on camera all sorts of crimes or misdeeds of one sort or another. | ||
And it's like every time he comes out with one, it's like, okay, so why is that person not being arrested? | ||
Usually they're fired, there's usually something. | ||
That happens from it, but just about everything James O 'Keefe has uncovered in any normal situation with an honest media would have resulted in major systemic change, but that's not the world we live in, | ||
so James O 'Keefe trudges along, and if what he's releasing today is that much more bombshell, that much bigger, that much more expansive than anything he's done before, Then I personally can't wait to see it. | ||
So we'll wait for that. | ||
And we'll show you Trump's Trump teasing some sort of big announcement in just a second. | ||
But we'll begin today, as we do every day, with our daily dispatch. | ||
All right, here it is, folks. | ||
Your Daily Dispatch for Wednesday, the 7th of May, 2025. | ||
India launches strikes on Pakistan after terror attack. | ||
And we'll break this down. | ||
We can break down the whole history and everything. | ||
Things just escalated in a huge and dangerous way between nuclear-armed rivals in India and Pakistan, with the Indian government confirming it has launched strikes on nine sites inside Pakistan, occupied Jammu and Kashmir. | ||
No Pakistani military facilities have been targeted, the statement said to Reuters. | ||
In a counterterror operation dubbed Operation Sindor, India identified that it hit the terrorist infrastructure of Islamicist groups in retaliation for the April 22nd terror attack on Indian tourists in Kashmir, which killed 26 in the scenic Pahalgrim area. | ||
The victims have been singled out by the gunmen, which the Indian government has suggested were sponsored by Pakistan for being Hindu in a sectarian mass killing. | ||
Again, we'll get into that a little bit later. | ||
We have videos of the strikes. | ||
The whole history of what's built up to this, this of course is a very, very long-running rivalry that has existed ever since the British partitioned the state back in 1947. | ||
So again, we'll get into all of it here in just a second. | ||
But it looks like this may be a limited action. | ||
On the other hand, both sides are saber-rattling and they're... | ||
It is a very good chance that this could continue to spiral out of control and become yet another proxy war between, in this case, America and China as China backs Pakistan and America backs India, although we have a lot of business we do with Pakistan as well. | ||
Next is this. | ||
Top U.S. officials will meet with Chinese delegation in Switzerland in first major talks of the trade war. | ||
U.S. and Chinese officials are starting talks this week to de-escalate the trade war, as reported by the Trump administration. | ||
The talks will take place in Switzerland from May 9th to 12th, according to China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs. | ||
Vice Premier He Leifeng will attend the talks in Switzerland, as confirmed by China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs. | ||
These discussions will be the first. | ||
High-level interactions since Vice President Han Zheng attended Trump's inauguration in January. | ||
So we're looking forward to some movement in that regard. | ||
Next we have this, and I actually have a video for this. | ||
We'll go to clip number eight in just a second. | ||
Supreme Court allows Trump to implement transgender military ban. | ||
... | ||
... | ||
banning transgender people from military service on May 6, 2025 in Washington, D.C. This measure implements President Trump's January executive order that restricted military service for current personnel and applicants diagnosed with gender dysphoria, reinstating a policy that had been overturned by President Biden. | ||
Pentagon's February 2025 policy disqualifies individuals with a history or symptoms of gender dysphoria from service unless granted a waiver and requires the separation of affected personnel by March 26th. | ||
Approximately 4,240 military personnel have been diagnosed with gender dysphoria, which is a lot. | ||
That's a lot, actually. | ||
That's too many. | ||
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That's... | |
That's too many. | ||
I'm just going to say that outright. | ||
4,240 military personnel diagnosed with gender dysphoria. | ||
Amazing. | ||
You have to wonder if it's not because people with gender dysphoria found out they could get their gender-affirming surgeries, their castrations, paid for by the U.S. government by joining the U.S. military. | ||
Perhaps that's why there is an outsized percentage there. | ||
But here's Pete Hegseth, Secretary of Defense, letting everybody know what time it is. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
No more pronouns. | ||
No more climate change obsession. | ||
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No more emergency vaccine mandates. | |
No more dudes in dresses. | ||
We're done with that shit. | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
Amazing stuff. | ||
Meanwhile, Trump says U.S. will end bombing of Houthi militants in Yemen. | ||
Trump says U.S. will cease strikes on Houthi militants. | ||
It was unclear whether the Houthis were going to stop impeding international shipping, which was the objective of the American bombing campaign. | ||
Although there's some stuff with this we need to get into. | ||
In fact, I printed the story out a couple days ago and I need to find it again. | ||
There's some scandalous activity going along with this bombing of the Houthis, including things like Bellingcat. | ||
There was a Bellingcat researcher. | ||
This is a military. | ||
It's kind of like the Rand Corporation. | ||
It's like a military advisory corporation, I guess you could call it. | ||
And this person was an analyst for them and posted something on X being like, hey, I think this might be a Houthi location. | ||
And it turns out that the American military saw that random anonymous X post and then bombed the location. | ||
That was noted in the Expost, even though there was no official confirmation of any sort, and this was just a sort of offhanded comment by a random non-government employee. | ||
It's very weird how they chose their targets and who they targeted and what effectiveness our hundreds upon hundreds of bombings have even had. | ||
Meanwhile, Israel has basically destroyed the Yemen airport. | ||
They bombed Sana 'a. | ||
Yemen capital and its airport doing $500 million worth of damage after a Houthi missile hit the Ben-Gurion airport in Tel Aviv. | ||
And it just, yeah, continues to be absolutely insane. | ||
So we'll revisit that in just a little bit. | ||
But finally, we have this. | ||
Cardinals gather for conclave to choose a new pope and more. | ||
Well, no, they're just going to choose a new pope. | ||
Chimney has been erected, and we await the multicolored smoke determining whether or not we have a new pope, a billion Catholics around the world, watching the Vatican with eager interest today. | ||
That is your daily dispatch, brought to you, of course, by thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
Go to thealexjonesstore.com today. | ||
Get your methylene blue. | ||
Take advantage of the incredible sales and support this singular outlet for... | ||
Truth, justice, the American way, everything good and wonderful in the world. | ||
We really do appreciate your support. | ||
We could not and will not be doing it without you. | ||
So, it's a pretty simple setup we have here. | ||
If you like a prominent first-rate news organization willing to cover the unpopular and indeed sometimes dangerous information about the real forces manipulating humanity, Please do go to thealexjonesstore.com and keep us around, because if you don't, we'll go away. | ||
And it really is as simple as that. | ||
So we hope we are upholding our end of the bargain, and we ask you to go to thealexjonesstore.com and support us in return. | ||
And again, we could not do it without you. | ||
So we'll get back into... | ||
Start with India and Pakistan. | ||
Just before we do that, though, I do want to go to clip number one as a... | ||
A round of applause to ourselves and of course BX on X and just in line with what I was just saying. | ||
If you want to have an outlet like Infowars that is prominent and powerful and willing to cover stories that nobody else will, you've got to support us. | ||
And one of the stories we've been covering regularly for the last year is the 764 satanic pedophile grooming gangs that is now hitting mainstream awareness and causing a giant... | ||
And of course, who knows how many kids would have been prevented from, you know, would have been protected from these people had BX on X or us been listened to long ago. | ||
But not being sold here, I'm actually just very happy that mainstream prominent news organizations like ABC News have now brought on BX to discuss this and are raising awareness about this very dangerous Force perverting our children. | ||
Let's go down to clip number one. | ||
Here is our friend of the show, Becca on ABC News. | ||
This group is also a terror threat. | ||
They try to goad children into committing acts of terrorism, school shootings, things of that nature. | ||
unidentified
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Becca Spinks is a self-defense advocate, competition sharpshooter, and private investigator who has been researching 764 for years, fielding calls for help from victims and their families, and providing information to law enforcement. | |
Taking down the leaders was a really good first move, but it's far from over. | ||
They'll have a long way to go to make sure that we're controlling this and make sure that nobody else steps up to the plate to lead the group now. | ||
So there you go. | ||
It's just great to see BX rising to national prominence and being rewarded for her dedicated and heretofore rewardless work hunting down these pedophile gangs. | ||
And again, not to pat ourselves on the back, although that's exactly what I'm going to do. | ||
Well, whatever. | ||
You know if you've been watching InfoWars for a while, you know how many people have risen to prominence after getting their start at InfoWars. | ||
I mean, the list really is incredible. | ||
Just off the top of my head, I remember when Alex Stein used to call in here and we'd do little comedy bits when he was doing Conspiracy Castle long before he got a Daily Wire show. | ||
The Blaze Show. | ||
Savannah Hernandez, of course, worked for years at InfoWars before breaking out on her own. | ||
Candace Owens used to come on here back when she was red pill black, and we were the only outlet that would have her on. | ||
The list really just goes on and on, and we really are like the launching vehicle for the majority of the right-wing dissident faction working right now, and it's awesome. | ||
We're very proud of everyone. | ||
And very happy to know what starts here goes on to literally change the world. | ||
So again, we're patting ourselves on the back. | ||
We're also patting you on the back for being there for us and with us and an integral part of this movement that has had such unbelievable success over the last decade or so. | ||
So thealexjonesstore.com will keep that ball rolling. | ||
And who knows how many more earth-changing geniuses will come out of this We won't have time to get to really get into India and Pakistan quite yet. | ||
We'll do that in the next round. | ||
But let's go first to clip number 12. Here's President Trump with sort of a tease about a major announcement coming up. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
I guess Monday night, some of you are coming with us. | ||
I think before then, we're going to have a very, very big announcement to make. | ||
Like, as big as it gets, and I won't tell you on what, and it's very positive. | ||
I'd also tell you if it was negative or positive. | ||
I can't keep that out. | ||
It is really, really positive. | ||
And that announcement will be made either Thursday or Friday or Monday before we leave. | ||
But it'll be one of the most important announcements that have been made. | ||
In many years, about a certain subject. | ||
Very important subject. | ||
So you'll all be here. | ||
The man is a master of his craft. | ||
I'll give him that. | ||
He learned a thing or two from being a reality TV star. | ||
That was a... | ||
That was an expert tease. | ||
That's what we in the business call an expert tease. | ||
He gave away nothing. | ||
But I certainly am... | ||
My interest is peaked. | ||
It's like it's the biggest announcement in the world, actually. | ||
And it's very positive. | ||
It's huge. | ||
It's earth-shattering. | ||
And I won't tell you what it is or even what it's about. | ||
Like, oh boy. | ||
I really can't wait. | ||
So whether this announcement happens today or a little bit later, he is planning on doing a big Middle East trip next week. | ||
And it looks like he's wanting to make this announcement before then. | ||
So take that into account. | ||
Here's clip 14. Him again teasing this very big announcement in even more grandiose verbiage. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
And, you know, I said before in our meeting with the new and very talented Prime Minister of Canada that we have some very big announcement to make. | ||
It's not about trade. | ||
It's about something else. | ||
But it's going to be a truly earth-shattering and positive development for this country and for the people of this country. | ||
And that'll take place sometime within the next few days. | ||
Earth-shattering positive announcement, not about trade. | ||
It's like 20 questions. | ||
It's like the guess what I'm thinking of game. | ||
Who knows? | ||
Who knows? | ||
I doubt it's a diplomatic deal with Iran. | ||
We haven't seen a lot of movements in that direction. | ||
The Houthi conflict seems to have come to some sort of conclusion, even though the end is ragged. | ||
Who knows what it is, but I'm excited. | ||
So stay tuned, and if that news drops today, we'll certainly be the first to bring it to you. | ||
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You're tuned in to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
All right. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
India and Pakistan are looking like they're getting closer and closer to a full-blown, all-out war, which would be not great. | ||
It would not be a great development in the area, although this is one of those conflicts that just sort of has been simmering. | ||
For nearly 100 years at this point, at the very least. | ||
And has nearly broken out into wider conflict multiple times since the area was partitioned by the British in 1947. | ||
I should have grabbed the video, although I believe I played it here when I played those clips from that British show, Yes Minister. | ||
And one of the things they are talking about is... | ||
You know, removing the colonial troops in the 60s, you know, I don't think people realize how long the British Empire held on to some of their protectorates or territories, like Jamaica was granted liberation in like 1964 or something, right? | ||
So up until the 60s, the Brits had, or, you know, even 70s and 80s in some cases, the British had all these territories, and there's a scene from Yes Minister where... | ||
They're talking about having trouble with one of their former colonies. | ||
And the other minister says, yeah, we should have partitioned it. | ||
Our issue was withdrawing all of our colonial infrastructure all at once. | ||
We should have partitioned it. | ||
That always works out better. | ||
He gives the examples. | ||
He's like, Ireland and Northern Ireland, Palestine and Israel, India and Pakistan, Vietnam and South Vietnam, whatever they were. | ||
And it's like, well, all of those... | ||
Have become intractable military conflicts since we left. | ||
And the guy's like, yeah, exactly. | ||
It keeps them entertained. | ||
It keeps them busy with each other. | ||
If you just slice their country down the middle, give half it to one group and half of it to another group, then you can leave and not worry about that country doing anything other than fighting itself for the foreseeable future. | ||
And so that happens over and over again. | ||
Again, that's just a few examples. | ||
Of times where the removal, the retreat of British colonial authority leaves behind a fractured, often artificially separated people. | ||
And in that regard, it's similar to Ukraine-Russia, where that partition is somewhat arbitrary in terms of the fact that it was just always one country I can't remember who it was, Gorbachev or somebody in the USSR. | ||
He was just from Ukraine and he just wanted to, he wanted Ukraine to be a separate distinct state and wanted to give it Crimea because that's where he was from and he just wanted to gift it there. | ||
So then when the Soviet Union fell, it became an independent republic. | ||
But historically, there was no distinction between Ukraine and Russia. | ||
Well, the same is true of Pakistan and India. | ||
Just to lay out the history for you a little bit. | ||
And the document that I linked there has some maps. | ||
I always need maps to figure this out. | ||
But basically, you had the whole area under control of the Mughal Empire up until the 19th century when the Brits came in and imposed colonial rule. | ||
And then you had this push for independence over the turn of the 20th century. | ||
And you had Muslim leagues in Pakistan and the Indian National Congress, which was Hindu, in India. | ||
And then with World War II weakening British control, the independence talks accelerated. | ||
And in 1947, the British partitioned India into two nations, India and Pakistan. | ||
And if we can bring up the map from that document, we can see exactly. | ||
I knew about the partition. | ||
I didn't realize that Bangladesh used to be called East Pakistan and was technically under Pakistan rule. | ||
But here is the division, as it were. | ||
So, of course, you have Pakistan over here. | ||
The territories in dispute are up here in the north, Kashmir and Jammu. | ||
I think it's called Jammu, which India and Pakistan have been... | ||
Debating about ever since, but you have Pakistan sort of broken off from India as the Muslim area, India under Hindu rule, and then you had East Pakistan over here that was broken off as Bangladesh in 1971. | ||
So the partition left unresolved issues, notably the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir, leading to the first Indo-Pakistan war in 1947-48. | ||
The two nations fought again in 1965 over Kashmir. | ||
That conflict ended in a stalemate. | ||
In 1971, East Pakistan's demand for autonomy supported by India led to the Bangladesh Liberation War. | ||
Pakistan's defeat resulted in Bangladesh's independence reshaping Pakistan and deepening animosity. | ||
The 1971 war led to the Simla Agreement in 1972, aiming for a bilateral dispute resolution, but distrust persisted. | ||
India's nuclear test in 1974 prompted Pakistan to pursue its own nuclear program, both achieving the capability in the 1980s, with both nations successfully testing nuclear weapons in 1998, raising global concerns about nuclear conflict. | ||
So this is really a very long held rivalry between these two countries that were for For centuries before the British partitioned them under the same governmental organization, although the Mughal Empire and for the millennia before things, you know, India is one of the oldest civilizations in the world. | ||
It is the, I believe at this point, it is the most populous country. | ||
I believe it has edged out China for that accolade. | ||
Either way, it's a much, much smaller area than China. | ||
And a hell of a lot of people jammed into it. | ||
Pakistan, of course, Muslim, India being Hindu. | ||
In recent years, relations remained tense, but with occasional de-escalation. | ||
In 2021, a ceasefire along the LOC has largely held, but cross-border terrorism and political rhetoric keep trust low, economic ties are minimal, with trade suspended since 2019. | ||
Both nations engage in global forums but avoid direct high-level talks. | ||
Kashmir, border skirmishes, and mutual accusations of supporting insurgencies continue to define their rivalry while nuclear capability deters all-out war. | ||
So there's been a number of, again, nearly all-out war, but it never quite raises up to the level that it has already gotten to in this conflict. | ||
But in the early 2000s and sort of throughout the 2010s, There were strikes into this disputed area which always sort of got tamped down and settled mostly by intervention from the U.S. which is one of the things that might be a little bit different about this conflict is very recently we have made major strides in strengthening our relationship with India. | ||
Vice President Vance was just there last month or I suppose it was in February to establish a more concrete And | ||
when it comes to this conflict... | ||
And Donald Trump, he doesn't seem particularly interested in getting involved. | ||
Maybe he's just got a little bit too much on his plate already with the whole Iran and Russia thing going on, China and Taiwan. | ||
He doesn't seem to be wanting to put a lot of energy into this, which is a little bit different than the conflicts before where America almost always played a prominent role in the negotiations. | ||
On the other hand, you have Pakistan and China as rather close allies. | ||
Again, just to break this down, the U.S. has deepened its ties with India as a key partner in its Indo-Pacific strategy to counter China. | ||
Initiative like the Quad, and that is the... | ||
What is it actually called? | ||
It's an agreement between... | ||
I thought I wrote down the actual... | ||
Oh, the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue. | ||
And it's between... | ||
U.S., India, Japan, and Australia. | ||
And if you look at a map, you can see how these four spots create a sort of polygon shape that they're referred to as the Quad, the Quadrilatical Security Dialogue. | ||
But you also have the U.S.-India Compact, which was just launched this year, February of 2025, emphasizing military trade and technological cooperation, a war. | ||
We'd likely see the U.S. supporting India diplomatically and possibly with military aid, reinforcing India's role as a counterweight to China, where China and Pakistan are allied as China is Pakistan's closest ally, providing military support, economic achievements, for example, the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, which would be part of the Belt and Road Initiative, and diplomatic backing. | ||
China views Pakistan as a strategic check against India and a key partner in its Belt and Road Initiative. | ||
A war would likely prompt China to bolster Pakistan, potentially straining U.S.-China relationships further. | ||
So that's just a little bird's-eye strategic geopolitical overview for you, as again, this would manifest as largely a proxy war, but not that they need any help going after each other. | ||
A lot of proxy wars have to be ginned up and fostered. | ||
By creating the situation, by doing things like, I don't know, overthrowing a government and installing a puppet leader, a la Ukraine. | ||
In this case, this has been a long simmering pot, just ready to boil over. | ||
And it has boiled over over the last couple weeks. | ||
And I gotta admit, I was watching the video from Alex yesterday. | ||
He did a video report live on... | ||
Twitter, about 20 minutes long, just laying down. | ||
Again, sort of the history and whatever about India and Pakistan. | ||
And I can tell he's a little bit frustrated because nobody seems to be taking it very seriously. | ||
And his whole thing is just, he's like, these are two nuclear arms. | ||
Every strategic simulation shows that this is the highest probability of nuclear war starting. | ||
India and Pakistan. | ||
Like, it's the flashpoint if you're talking about what is the conflict most likely to lead to nuclear exchange. | ||
It's this. | ||
Right? | ||
And he's like, because, and a lot of people have noticed this, you know, when the Ukraine war started, you went on X and it was all, oh my god, this is horrible. | ||
Thoughts and prayers. | ||
You know, what are we going to do about this? | ||
Ukraine flag and the username. | ||
It was very dour, you know, somber. | ||
And then India and Pakistan declare war and everybody's like, cool, that'll be fun. | ||
Wonder which one will destroy the other. | ||
People aren't seeming to take it very seriously. | ||
But in a way, in a weird way, this whole thing has been bizarre. | ||
So the current conflict, and I'll break down what has actually happened here. | ||
So India has launched strikes on Pakistan. | ||
Pakistan has responded by... | ||
Military moves, including sending tanks and getting planes ready for bombing missions. | ||
No Pakistani military facilities have been targeted, according to India. | ||
India identified that it hit terrorist infrastructure of Islamist groups in retaliation for the April 22nd terror attack on Indian tourists in Kashmir, which killed 26 in the scenic Pahalgrim area. | ||
and there you see just one of the missiles striking in fact if we can play that let's go back to that one um so i want to play it with the audio the audio is pretty This must have been the second one because you can see how everybody's acting. | ||
Nobody has their camera out. | ||
They must have just seen an explosion when they captured the second one on film. | ||
So here's the attack that occurred on Pakistan by India yesterday. | ||
And of course India says we're just targeting these militant groups in Pakistan, which Pakistan is rife with these Islamist militant groups, that are not technically allied with the Pakistan government, but India believes that they have proof or evidence or at least a reason to assume that this group was sponsored or at least tolerated by the Pakistan government, and they are blaming the Pakistan government for allowing this terrorist attack to take place. | ||
Now the terror attack itself, on April 22nd, Was caught on video by a guy with a selfie stick filming himself laughing his way down a zip line. | ||
So again, it's like it's a terror attack, but just almost or completely by happenstance and by accident, you happen to get this almost like naked gun style comedy scene, which is not funny. | ||
I mean, 26 people were killed and you hear gunshots going off. | ||
But still, there's this guy laughing as he goes down his zip line while underneath him people flee from this terrorist attack. | ||
Let's go to clip number 7 now. | ||
Let me keep the audio down because it's extremely loud. | ||
But you can hear the gunshots. | ||
I'll keep it all the way down. | ||
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Ah! | |
So they hear one gunshot. | ||
We see all these people. | ||
All these people down below are the Indian tourists. | ||
And you see them right about here. | ||
You'll start to see them running. | ||
You see everybody start to run away from where the gunshots are coming. | ||
And in just about two seconds, you'll see somebody fall. | ||
Looks like they actually get hit by a bullet or something right there. | ||
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*Sounds of a fire* you you | |
So again, it's like... | ||
Like, it's not funny. | ||
At the same time, the dude is going on a zipline underneath and people are being massacred. | ||
And he's totally unaware of it. | ||
It's just, there's something strange about this whole conflict. | ||
And we can play the video we were just playing of the two border guards. | ||
This was another, this happened shortly after the terror attack when tensions were extremely high. | ||
And this is the border between Pakistan and India. | ||
And you see the two guards, like, Call this roostering. | ||
What they're doing is roostering here. | ||
They're like yelling at each other. | ||
They're like stomping at each other. | ||
And just from an outsider view, it's just like, what is this? | ||
They're just, they're aggressively stamping. | ||
They're aggressively flinging their arms. | ||
And there's another video, I can't for the life of me find it. | ||
Maybe if somebody on X wants to tag me in it, but it was another one that... | ||
You know, came out shortly after this, before the strikes had happened after the terrorist attack. | ||
And it's, you know, ministers from India and Pakistan yelling at each other on TV, debating each other, and they're just... | ||
I mean, it is comical. | ||
It's like a comedy routine. | ||
So it's like people aren't really taking this that seriously. | ||
They really... | ||
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I think it's just a... | |
Fact of the way these two countries have been portrayed on the internet in the recent past. | ||
But this is not a small deal and could easily spiral out into absolutely gigantic conflict. | ||
Again, we've got videos of, that was clip number 11, right? | ||
The demilitary, militarized zone. | ||
We've got another video of the Indian missile strike. | ||
I believe 15 we haven't watched yet. | ||
Alright, let's go to 10 here. | ||
This is another view of the bombing from yesterday. | ||
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Oh, yeah. | |
You can just see the size of this explosion. | ||
Absolutely massive. | ||
There's also footage of a... | ||
Pakistani tank, clip number 13. Reportedly, Pakistani Al-Khalid and VT1A main battle tanks have been seen advancing towards the India-Pakistan border as of this morning. | ||
So here we see the armored vehicles heading towards the India-Pakistan border. | ||
Again, hinting that this is not going to be the sort of flash-in-the-pan conflict that some other recent exchanges have ended at. | ||
India identified that it hit this terrorist infrastructure. | ||
The victims of this terrorist attack on April 22nd had been singled out by gunmen, which the Indian government had suggested were sponsored by Pakistan, and they were targeted for being Hindu in a sectarian mass killing. | ||
These steps come in the wake of a barbaric Pahalgrim terrorist attack in which 25 Indians and one Nepali citizen were murdered. | ||
We are living up to the commitment that those responsible for this attack will be held accountable, India's statement read in the wake of the new military actions. | ||
The fact that India is taking pains to let the Pakistani side know that no official military sites were targeted strongly suggests New Delhi is trying to strike without it leading to escalation. | ||
Tensions have been soaring since last month with mere buildups of forces on both sides of the disputed Line of Control, LOC, which separates the two countries. | ||
There have been military drills and even recent ballistic missile tests launched by Pakistan. | ||
Pakistan security officials have said a child was killed and two others injured in the early Thursday attack. | ||
India said that these were sites where terrorists against India had planned their attacks. | ||
And they're trying to maintain that it is non-escalatory in nature. | ||
And India is making that very clear. | ||
When you look at the armaments, India very clearly has the upper hand. | ||
We can go to clip number three here and just roll this as B-roll. | ||
This is just a... | ||
Summation of the current military capabilities. | ||
Here you see the Pakistani Air Force with 60 jets, while India sits at a comfortable lead with 264, which is the transport aircrafts in their armory. | ||
In terms of fighter jets, Pakistan 387 of those, while India a little bit more, 606. | ||
So again, nearly doubling the Pakistan capabilities. | ||
In terms of, I guess those are bomber jets, Pakistan 1,434, while India has 2,296. | ||
Okay, that's total aircraft, so combine those together. | ||
In terms of helicopters, I mean, long story short, India's got 40 of those. | ||
Pakistan has 57, actually beats out India in terms of attack helicopters. | ||
Regardless, you're talking about a much more substantial population, a much more substantial economy to handle their military. | ||
As Alex was reporting yesterday, they have something like, reportedly they have, and by the way, India does have two aircraft carriers, which are still less so, but still at this point, the premier... | ||
You know, war fighting platform on the seas. | ||
India's 18 submarines to Pakistan's 8. So Alex was saying that, you know, he thinks, he doesn't believe the official numbers. | ||
The official numbers say that combined they have something like 250 nuclear warheads. | ||
Although, who knows, at the end of the day. | ||
At the end of the day, people in the know believe that They're much, much more well-armed in the nuclear realm than is officially acknowledged. | ||
So we'll see where this goes. | ||
We'll continue to monitor it. | ||
So far, the attacks from India yesterday have been the totality of what has occurred. | ||
But it's a very, very, very long-running, again, rivalry. | ||
I'll tell you, if you've ever been friends with a Pakistani person, if the topic of India ever came up, I personally have never heard such vitriol as I heard from my Pakistani friend talking about India. | ||
I mean, they really genuinely hate each other. | ||
Yeah, air traffic has essentially totally stopped since the launching of the missiles. | ||
And again, we can get more into this, but... | ||
It seems to me like the alliances in question here, it would not be in their best interest to allow this to go on much longer or expand much more. | ||
I think everybody has a little bit too much on their plates already. | ||
And I can't see China or America in the midst of this tariff war, in the midst of negotiations over Iran, over Ukraine, China preparing to invade Taiwan. | ||
I really can't think that they're going to give priority to a territorial dispute in the foothills of the Himalayas, but what do I know? | ||
One of the jets supposedly went down. | ||
Reportedly, an Indian jet was downed in Pakistan. | ||
But so far, no retaliatory attacks have been taken, and we'll again wait to see where this goes. | ||
They are nuclear armed. | ||
They are extremely angry at each other. | ||
And things do seem to be starting out on that tit-for-tat feedback loop that nobody wants. | ||
Nobody who cares about, you know, life and human beings not being evaporated by nuclear missiles. | ||
Again, we'll give you any updates as it comes, but so far, hopefully, it looks like this may be... | ||
I don't want to say it. | ||
We'll see. | ||
We'll just wait and see, because who knows with these countries. | ||
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We'll see you next time. | |
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
Second hour is on. | ||
I want to go in this first short segment here to a video by Katherine Herridge, an incredible reporter fired from CBS News for refusing to reveal her sources. | ||
She did some interviews with some whistleblowers from the federal government describing what we've known and we puzzled out with our own logic when it was happening that the Biden administration decided to stop doing DNA tests at the border on purpose because We're not related to the people they were with. | ||
Blatant child trafficking that they themselves were participating in, they decided to do away with DNA tests so the child trafficking could continue unabated. | ||
Horrifying stuff. | ||
The full video is about 10 minutes long. | ||
We'll show you the first few minutes here, and you can find the rest from Catherine Herridge on X. Let's go now to clip number 17. Americans are dead. | ||
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And these deaths were preventable. | |
So this internal government memo confirms that you were retaliated against because you spoke out against officials at Homeland Security who you believed were violating the law. | ||
Yes. | ||
100%. | ||
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The agency's goal is to bankrupt you, make you quit, die, kill yourselves, or basically, preferably, all of the above. | |
The American Pronunciation Guide Presents "How to Pronounce Banking"This law is on the books. | ||
Yes. | ||
Is Homeland Security enforcing the DNA collection law? | ||
Not fully. | ||
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As a result, are Americans less safe? | |
Yes. | ||
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No question in your mind? | |
None. | ||
Our team sat down with three government whistleblowers with seven decades of law enforcement experience. | ||
They work at Customs and Border Protection, or CBP, a division of Homeland Security. | ||
This internal government memo confirms that you were retaliated against because you spoke out against officials at Homeland Security who you believed were violating the law. | ||
Yes. | ||
Yes. | ||
100%. | ||
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The agency's intentional decade-long failure to implement Yes. | |
public safety. | ||
That's its conclusion. | ||
Customs and border protection is in violation of the federal law and it's done knowingly. | ||
Yes. | ||
This internal Homeland Security directive, marked law enforcement sensitive, lays out the law. | ||
The border agency is required to collect DNA samples from non-United States persons in detention for immigration violations. | ||
Known as the DNA Fingerprint Act, it passed in 2005 with bipartisan support. | ||
So there's no ambiguity. | ||
The language is clear. | ||
It lays it out as a roadmap. | ||
Have you ever seen a directive like this be ignored? | ||
Never. | ||
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No. | |
Okay, a lot of people are going to be confused. | ||
Homeland Security's job is to uphold the law and to keep Americans safe. | ||
But what you're alleging is that Homeland Security is not complying with the law. | ||
That's correct. | ||
Since 2021, under the Biden-Harris administration, Homeland Security's own data reports more than 10 million border encounters. | ||
The internal mood is it's a dumpster fire. | ||
It is a questioning of our mission versus what is actually being executed in the field. | ||
Jones showed us what's supposed to happen in the field when DNA is collected from individuals detained and processed on immigration violations. | ||
So Catherine, this is the kit that's provided by the FBI to the Customs and Border Protection officers and agents. | ||
Place it inside your cheek. | ||
Rub inside your cheek three times. | ||
Three times, yeah. | ||
You're collecting saliva and skin cells or epithelial cells. | ||
Okay. | ||
I would then take it back from you, close it, place it inside the white envelope, which then gets sent to the FBI laboratory for processing. | ||
So 30 seconds to collect, about $4 a pack. | ||
Correct. | ||
How long to process by the FBI? | ||
Approximately 72 hours. | ||
So it helps you identify suspects. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
It gives an investigative lead to a law enforcement agency. | ||
Has the system solved cold cases? | ||
Yes, it's presumptively solved over 1,000 cases just from DNA collection. | ||
Not only does it cut down on crime, it also cuts down on the time that it takes law enforcement to find this individual. | ||
You've had Republican administrations, you've had Democratic administrations. | ||
Have either of them implemented the law? | ||
No. | ||
The willful noncompliance, I believe, is inexplicable. | ||
So that's Catherine Herridge reporting on these whistleblowers, exposing the criminality at the core of what should be the people enforcing our laws and protecting the American people. | ||
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Music Taking a record of the hearts and minds of the American people, it's The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
All right, welcome back. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is The American Journal. | ||
We're going to open up the phone lines for your calls this hour and into the next. | ||
And I'll open up the phone lines for new callers first. | ||
New callers only at first because... | ||
A couple of you guys have us on speed dial or something. | ||
You always get your foot in the door for anybody else. | ||
So hang on. | ||
Hang on for a second, fellas. | ||
If you've ever called in before, chill. | ||
Chill for a minute. | ||
Let people who haven't gotten on yet get in. | ||
So give us a call. | ||
If you've never called in or have called in, been on hold and haven't gotten on air, give us a call. | ||
The number is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
That's 1-877-789-2539. | ||
We'll take your calls as they come in. | ||
I got... | ||
I've got a bunch of videos still to show you, and I think we'll continue on the topic of immigration. | ||
Here we just saw that great report by Catherine Herridge about the deliberate criminality carried out, conducted against us for the benefit of the illegal immigrants by the DHS and CBP and a number of other acronyms. | ||
We'll go now to clip number 25. This is a... | ||
Whistleblower revealing DHS sends $600 million to government-funded NGOs helping to facilitate illegal immigration. | ||
This on top of, you know, all of the other billions of dollars that they get through all of the other programs, all unanimously designed to destroy our country and flood it with tens of millions of people. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
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Carol, and anybody else would like to answer this, can you name some of these NGOs that have specifically taken these hundreds of millions of dollars and not used it to protect these children? | |
Catholic Charities, Lutheran Family Services, Jewish Family Services. | ||
I spoke to a gentleman that works in DHS. | ||
He actually sends the electronic fund transfers, and I asked him, "Sir, tell me." Who are you responsible for and how much is the largest check you cut? | ||
He said, I'm over Jewish Family Services and I cut a check for $600 million. | ||
And I said, is that for like three years? | ||
And he told me, JJ, get in the game. | ||
That's two or three months and it's renewable. | ||
Two or three months. | ||
$600 million to one single NGO. | ||
Jewish Family Services. | ||
$600 million every two to three months to one NGO. | ||
So, I mean... | ||
Why are we not arresting these people? | ||
Why are we not arresting these people? | ||
I really want to know. | ||
These people who have systematically brought in. | ||
And at this point, I mean, there's no attempt even by the Democrats to couch this action as necessary or somehow beneficial to the United States. | ||
I mean, at this point, it's pretty much an open conspiracy that there's like, we are trying to destroy the United States. | ||
And we're flooding the country with tens of millions of people to achieve that goal. | ||
It's not about asylum. | ||
It's not about the huddled masses yearning to be free. | ||
This is traitors in the United States opening the city gates to the invading army. | ||
So, where are the arrests? | ||
I really want to know. | ||
$600 million every two to three months. | ||
Just wrap your mind around that one, won't you? | ||
Just completely insane. | ||
Then again, you know, it's like everything our government does, has done. | ||
It's either evil or stupid. | ||
I mean, those are the only options. | ||
Either they deliberately flooded our country with tens of millions of people. | ||
Or they just were that incompetent. | ||
They didn't know what they were doing. | ||
It's like, why even entertain that? | ||
They're evil. | ||
They're attacking the United States. | ||
They're using a proxy army of migrants to destroy us from the inside out. | ||
It's actually not that complicated. | ||
Then you have things like FEMA that is so woefully incompetent. | ||
It's also difficult to believe that this is not on purpose. | ||
Let's go now to clip number 21. This is Representative Rosa DeLauro asking Kristi Noem about why she thinks that FEMA's been a failure, and the answer Kristi Noem gives is kind of hilarious, honestly. | ||
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Let's go now to clip number 21. Where is the evidence of the failure of FEMA? | |
Congresswoman, we still have claims open from Hurricane Katrina. | ||
We have fire claims that are still unpaid to people who said they were due them 7 to 8 to 10 years old. | ||
They have never been paid by FEMA. | ||
So one of the worst things that the federal government can do is to stand up in front of the American public and say, we will be there. | ||
We will walk alongside you in the most... | ||
Horrible time of your life and then never follow through on it. | ||
What the president has said is he's sick and tired of federal agencies that pick and choose who wins and who loses. | ||
He wants to make sure that the federal government's commitment, when it makes a commitment, that it follows through. | ||
So he's going to empower states. | ||
The federal government is abdicating its commitment to the American people who find themselves. | ||
It did, certainly under Joe Biden's administration. | ||
Let me just say this to you. | ||
The Office of Professional Responsibility. | ||
Office of Professional, because I knew you were going to go there. | ||
As you know, FEMA's Office of Professional Responsibility. | ||
Under the Biden administration, there was no evidence, no direction or agency or field leadership to discriminate against disaster victims based on political affiliation, which was a charge. | ||
That is a lie. | ||
And I will follow up. | ||
I will follow up. | ||
And I'll follow up with my colleagues, quite frankly. | ||
And to really listen to people whose... | ||
States, communities have been devastated and what role FEMA has played. | ||
I don't know how many millions and millions of dollars went out in Louisiana. | ||
Actually, I've asked my staff to calculate that when Katrina hit. | ||
And the response was overwhelming. | ||
And the response has been overwhelming. | ||
If you want to make corrections, that's fine. | ||
We all agree with that. | ||
Yeah, we can point to thousands and thousands of air... | ||
Well, if you wouldn't mind getting this committee, if you wouldn't mind getting this committee, the information and the evidence where you talk about the dysfunction of the agency and where it has really failed, that would be important to those of us who are appropriating dollars. | ||
Rosa DeLauro, here's the Carbage Pail Libs version. | ||
I think the garbage pail version is more attractive than the real version. | ||
How does that work? | ||
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So we'll put you down as a wood? | |
Like, oh, Lord, no. | ||
I mean, she is like a cartoon character. | ||
She is like a parody Saturday Night Live version of a libtard. | ||
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There's the science version. | |
No evidence FEMA discriminated against Trump supporters under Biden. | ||
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They just say this stuff. | |
I wasn't prepared. | ||
Do we need to find the evidence? | ||
I mean, it's not even debated. | ||
FEMA admitted it. | ||
They justified it. | ||
My God, there's just so much. | ||
So much about that exchange we just saw. | ||
First of all, the fundamental Inability of Democrats to believe that government programs aren't good. | ||
She literally gets angry when evidence is put forward that FEMA is not exactly the most efficient or effective government entity out there. | ||
Why would you say FEMA is a failure? | ||
They still haven't paid out from Hurricane Katrina. | ||
Half the people in the room weren't alive during Hurricane Katrina. | ||
Three more FEMA employees fired after probe into order to skip Trump humps. | ||
I'm telling you, what can we do about this? | ||
Can she be censured? | ||
Can she be removed from her platform? | ||
I mean, I know that the witnesses are under oath, not the people in office, but maybe that needs to swap. | ||
Like, can we charge with perjury? | ||
The temerity of these people. | ||
To just blatantly lie to your face about this stuff. | ||
It's not a matter of opinion. | ||
It's not a matter of interpretation. | ||
FEMA admitted to avoiding houses with Trump signs in front of them. | ||
They justified it by saying it's similar to if the House had a beware of the dog sign. | ||
That if... | ||
Somebody's afraid of dogs that works at FEMA. | ||
If they're doing the door knocking, going door to door, if they see a big sign in the yard that says don't enter, beware of dog, attack dog present, they don't have to go in because obviously they might get attacked by a dog. | ||
And the FEMA administrator said a Trump sign is the same type of danger for a leftist, for a liberal. | ||
If somebody doesn't agree with Trump, then they would somehow be in danger. | ||
By having to go help a Trump supporter. | ||
So it's not even like... | ||
Yeah, she was a fired female worker accused of skipping homes with Trump signs that says she was following protocol. | ||
It's not even up for debate. | ||
It's not denied by the people accused. | ||
It's not a question of interpretation. | ||
It's not a question of validity. | ||
FEMA itself has confirmed that this was the case. | ||
And then that blue-haired... | ||
Harpy sits up there and says, that never happened. | ||
Never happened. | ||
She says, you're totally making it up. | ||
She says, you're totally making it up. | ||
As part of my belief in free speech, I'm willing to give quite a bit of stretching to the truth in terms of interpretation. | ||
In terms of, hey, you can interpret it however you want. | ||
You know, whatever. | ||
You can express yourself wherever you want. | ||
But just blatantly lying like this? | ||
Just abject, provably false things? | ||
Again, you see the real issue with America is the fact that the voters keep putting this, I don't know, woman? | ||
Keep putting this woman into office. | ||
This really is sort of the dichotomy of our time. | ||
And I talk about it with things like TikTok. | ||
Everybody's mad at TikTok because TikTok in China feeds kids, you know, shows kids science experiments and cultural things and ballet and like very nice things that kids should view. | ||
Whereas in America, your kid is likely to come across some 35-year-old transgender man in a dress with a beard. | ||
Teaching your kid how to order hormones. | ||
And it's like, okay. | ||
The problem is that the algorithm gives you what you want. | ||
If you watch woodworking videos, it gives you woodworking videos. | ||
If you watch videos about clarinet, it gives you videos about clarinet. | ||
If you watch videos about transgenderism, it gives you videos about transgenderism. | ||
It's not the fault, frankly, of the algorithm. | ||
That's what people are watching. | ||
It's people's own self-control that has to be invoked, not a governmental interference. | ||
That's the only other option. | ||
Either the people have to just choose the right thing on their own, no government influence needed, or the government has to come in and dictate what is and is not good content for you to see. | ||
I want to live in a world where the people are able to choose for themselves not to watch disgusting crap. | ||
Instead, choose to watch scientific or enlightening or, in other way, beneficial and edifying content. | ||
But if they don't, there's not a lot you can do about that. | ||
It's the same thing here, where it's like, I don't want an authority having to step in and dictate things to our congresspeople. | ||
But what happens when you have congresspeople who just blatantly lie, And they just keep getting re-elected. | ||
And the people who elect them either don't care that they're lying and think it's fine because they're in this dog-eat-dog ends-justify-the-means mindset where they genuinely don't care. | ||
They're just like, yeah, she had to lie to get what she wanted? | ||
Good that I'm glad she lied because she's on my team. | ||
Or they don't know. | ||
Or they have no idea. | ||
And they're so ill-informed. | ||
They're so misinformed. | ||
Deliberately misinformed. | ||
That they'll actually, like, I wouldn't be surprised if they started invoking this fact as evidence of somebody being crazy conspiracy theorists, right? | ||
Or this type of thing where they go, they're the type of person that believes that FEMA doesn't help Trump supporters. | ||
You know, where they actually, people actually bring it up as an example of these crazy ideas people have when it's like, it's not remotely debatable. | ||
That this happened. | ||
The people that did it admitted it. | ||
They came up with excuses. | ||
They explained why they were doing it. | ||
People were fired over it. | ||
It was a giant scandal. | ||
The report on mainstream news, the people involved testified to their participation in it. | ||
Fast forward six months, and the Congresswoman is saying, never happened. | ||
Never happened. | ||
Didn't happen. | ||
That's a lie. | ||
And she's mad. | ||
She's yelling at the witness. | ||
She's yelling at Christy Noem. | ||
I knew you were going to go there! | ||
What do we do? | ||
What do we do about these people, man? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know, but we shouldn't have to sit here and let them get away with this. | ||
Can you censure her? | ||
Can you charge her with perjury? | ||
I know she didn't take an oath, but congresspeople really can just lie like that? | ||
A congressman lying? | ||
What? | ||
I know. | ||
I shouldn't be shocked. | ||
I know. | ||
I get it. | ||
But still. | ||
We gotta do something about these purple-haired witches. | ||
And they're really just offensively lying at us. | ||
I'm gonna go to one more video before we go out to calls. | ||
This is RFK Jr. on the gain-of-function ban. | ||
This, again, you saw in the first five minutes of this program with the great new report by John Bowne, which, of course, you can find and share on X at InfoWars.com and banned.video. | ||
But let's go now to RFK Jr. talking about the recent ban on gain-of-function research and really connecting the dots in a way that, again, I think we can all just sit back and appreciate the fact the people in power are us. | ||
It's us, you guys. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
Here's RFK Jr. breaking down the gain-of-function control grid vaccine scam conspiracy. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
Interfunction studies, the kind of science that is designed to make microbes and pathogens more virulent, more transmissible, and more deadly. | ||
It was in this country, they started doing it in 1947, the military and the intelligence agencies, in order to develop bioweapons. | ||
In 1969, President Nixon banned it all, shut down Fort Detrick, shut down all the labs. | ||
And then signed the Bioweapons Convention. | ||
That ban lasted until 2001. | ||
And after the anthrax attacks, Anthony Fauci began, essentially restarted the arms race and the bioweapons arms race and did it under the pretension of developing vaccines because of the same science that you develop bioweapons and vaccines. | ||
In 2014, three of his bugs escaped. | ||
And 300 scientists wrote letters to... | ||
President Obama asked him to shut down Anthony Fauci. | ||
President Obama declared a moratorium, but instead of shutting down his experiments, he moved them offshore, mainly to the Wuhan lab. | ||
And now, you know, the principal institutions of our government, the CIA, the FBI, the State Department, Department of Energy, all say that it is most likely that those experiments resulted in the COVID-19 pandemic beginning in 2019. | ||
So President Trump today moved to shut down this kind of research in this country and to stop funding it abroad. | ||
Yeah, finally. | ||
Yeah, again, finally. | ||
Special report, eliminate all gain-of-function research. | ||
That is the report we saw in the first five minutes of this program by John Bowne. | ||
So again, just a triumph, really. | ||
A trophy in this war. | ||
A battle trophy, right? | ||
Standard in our grasp. | ||
It really is amazing to see that literally our work, our activism, all of us, not just InfoWars, but everybody on this side has led to actually achieving a tangible major victory against the evil scum that want to enslave everyone, I'll remind you. | ||
Of course, I said yesterday on X. It's kind of upsetting knowing that no matter what Trump achieves in the next couple years, no matter how successful his programs, it can all be undone by the enemy if they just release a bioweapon pathogen in 2027. | ||
They can just wipe out everything. | ||
Totally reset everything. | ||
Global Great Reset 2.0. | ||
They'll get it right this time. | ||
Maybe they'll release a real pathogen that really does Transmit extremely fast and kill everybody that it infects. | ||
They have it. | ||
Oh, they have the capability for sure. | ||
Airborne diseases of any sort with a 50% death rate or even higher. | ||
They could release that at any point. | ||
So my advice to Trump is arrest the people that did that once already. | ||
You know the people that did that once already on purpose by design. | ||
In your last year in office, 2020, to derail your administration, destroy your economic gains, imprison your constituents and home so they can do the voting rigging through the mail-in ballots. | ||
Like, you know they did that to us, right? | ||
So they'll do it again. | ||
Don't think they won't do it again. | ||
In fact, they keep making videos about how they're going to do it again. | ||
So arrest them immediately so they don't do that to us again, please. | ||
Trump. | ||
Just, we want to see these people in handcuffs. | ||
You can do it. | ||
You can do it. | ||
What is stopping you? | ||
Genuinely, what is stopping you? | ||
I meant to go out to call this segment. | ||
I'll go out to call this next segment because I really want to hammer this home. | ||
What is stopping Trump from arresting Anthony Fauci? | ||
Play this out in your mind. | ||
You wake up, or hell, we're sitting here one day when scrolling across our X feed. | ||
Is an image of a SWAT team kicking down Anthony Fauci's door and dragging him off at 5 in the morning in his t-shirt like they did to Roger Stone. | ||
Remember when they did that to Roger Stone? | ||
Over nothing? | ||
Over nothing? | ||
Maybe, you know, when you compare whatever they accused Roger Stone of doing, misremembering an inconsequential data point. | ||
During days of testimony. | ||
I mean, they'll kick his door down in the middle of the night with a camera crew there. | ||
Anthony Fauci unleashed a global pathogen that destroyed our economy and killed God knows how many people. | ||
Kick his door down in the middle of the night, drag him off, charge him with crimes against humanity, and put him to death if that's what's required. | ||
What would happen? | ||
Oh, the left would be mad. | ||
Yeah, I bet. | ||
Oh, they would be really mad. | ||
Okay, yeah, I bet they would. | ||
Oh, the media would denounce it. | ||
Yeah, probably. | ||
Oh, doctors groups would come together and say they're scared. | ||
Yeah, I bet. | ||
Then? | ||
And then? | ||
And then what? | ||
Nothing? | ||
And then Anthony Fauci goes to jail, and the signal is sent out, and the danger is eliminated. | ||
So why are we not doing this? | ||
What is the downside? | ||
What is the limiting factor? | ||
What is the barrier preventing us from stopping these people from doing it again? | ||
because they're going to do it again. | ||
unidentified
|
You're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
We've got to do your phone calls here. | ||
I thought it was a joke. | ||
I saw this yesterday or this morning at some point. | ||
I thought it was Babylon Bee. | ||
Genuinely, I thought this was Babylon Bee. | ||
There's a massive bronze sculpture of a woman in the middle of Times Square in New York City right now. | ||
This giant bronze statue of a woman was just installed in the middle of Times Square. | ||
Do you want to know the meaning behind it? | ||
I think we know the meaning behind it. | ||
It's a bored-looking black woman in a t-shirt. | ||
unidentified
|
That's a big old bitch. | |
She's a big lady. | ||
She's a very big lady. | ||
This article is written by somebody who loves this, apparently. | ||
I don't know how you could possibly love this. | ||
Let's just be honest. | ||
For our radio viewers, I mean, what we're looking at here, it's exactly what I just imagined, a bored-looking black woman with her hands on her hips. | ||
It's neither special or heroic or awe-inspiring or distinct or even of a real person. | ||
It's just generic black woman. | ||
Giant bronze statue. | ||
How could you... | ||
Can we pull this video? | ||
I want to see what people are saying about it. | ||
Because what is this? | ||
It really is emblematic, isn't it? | ||
You tear down statues of great men in history who achieved things that... | ||
Forever altered the course of the world as they simultaneously tear down Christopher Columbus and Thomas Jefferson and Teddy Roosevelt in New York City. | ||
They're putting up 12-foot bronze statues of anonymous, non-existent, generic BIPOC woman. | ||
It's just like, yeah, this is kind of Perfect, actually. | ||
Kind of exactly what our culture is going through right now. | ||
Sacrificing the old heroes, destroying and demonizing their greatness, while uplifting and celebrating literally nothing, like something that doesn't exist, or criminals, or just literal drug addict criminals who pointed guns at pregnant women. | ||
If there was ever a reason to trek to Times Square, this is it. | ||
Oh yeah, you can't miss this. | ||
Can you imagine missing out on seeing this in person? | ||
unidentified
|
No, you literally cannot miss that. | |
You literally can't miss. | ||
If there was ever a reason to trek several blocks around Times Square, I think the naked cowboy is a better reason to visit Times Square. | ||
I think the... | ||
Cracked-out, filthy Elmo costume wearer. | ||
That's a better reason to visit Times Square. | ||
Getting a disgusting, grisly kebab from a street vendor. | ||
That's a better reason to visit Times Square. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I'll calm down. | ||
unidentified
|
Diabetes must be celebrated. | |
Diabetes must be celebrated. | ||
If there was ever a reason to trek to Times Square, this is it. | ||
A massive 12-foot tall bronze sculpture of a young woman by figurative artist Thomas J. Price. | ||
Well, at least they got that right. | ||
At least they call him the correct thing. | ||
Thomas J. Price. | ||
Is he an artist? | ||
Well, figuratively. | ||
Yeah, figuratively he is an artist. | ||
Like, theoretically, you could call him that. | ||
He just doesn't have a soul. | ||
He just doesn't express anything worthy of value or celebration or even just basic aesthetic positivity. | ||
It's an ugly, plain, pointless, meaningless assault on your senses. | ||
If that's art. | ||
I guess if that's art, then my dog is an artist and the lawn is her canvas, right? | ||
I'm sorry to our callers. | ||
This is the crew's fault. | ||
They brought this into me and I cannot resist. | ||
Okay? | ||
Like fishing with worms. | ||
It's cheating. | ||
You can't drop this in front of me and expect me to go to calls immediately. | ||
It was just installed in the area on the north side of Duffy Square on Broadway and 46th Street facing 47th. | ||
It will be on display through June 17th. | ||
The public art piece is part of a series called Grounded in the Stars. | ||
Because absolutely everything these people do has to be saturated in the faux intellectual slop grounded in the stars. | ||
Wow, what does that mean? | ||
Oh, nothing? | ||
Okay, never mind then. | ||
It, quote, confronts preconceived notions of identity and representation by what? | ||
Fulfilling the preconceived notions? | ||
How are you confronting preconceived notions? | ||
Seems to me like Putting a 12-foot bronze statue, celebrating the accomplishments of a obese, random lady. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, let's talk about preconceived notions. | |
I mean, seriously, like, generic black woman has to be overweight? | ||
Like, seriously. | ||
It's not my preconceived notion. | ||
That was not. | ||
And she's kind of pissed off. | ||
I like how her face, I mean, he does have some artistry, because let's admit, it's hard. | ||
To make a face that devoid of spark and life and consciousness. | ||
I mean, look at that. | ||
You could not sculpt a less... | ||
unidentified
|
Look at her oozing with apathy. | |
Exactly. | ||
It's like, how do you carve dead eyes? | ||
That's really like an accomplishment to me. | ||
How do you convey... | ||
Through the medium of sculpture, such utter absence of thought. | ||
It's really incredible. | ||
Such lifelessness. | ||
It's mind-blowing. | ||
It's astonishing. | ||
And this is a trend, by the way. | ||
This is in the Piazza di Signoria in Florence, Italy, where another statue has recently gone up. | ||
It's another bored-looking black woman, this time on her phone. | ||
Wow. | ||
Are you feeling inspired? | ||
I mean, when you go to Florence and you see, you know, Michelangelo's David, you see the incredible sculptures carved from marble hundreds of years ago that still to this day resonate and inspire. | ||
It was sort of a wordless greatness. | ||
Anybody that goes to see it, I mean, that's a feeling I get, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Our big black lady has better posture. | |
Kinda. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Does she? | ||
They're both slouching. | ||
No, slouching, disgruntled-looking black women. | ||
The symbol of our modern age. | ||
Hey, if you don't want me to make fun of it, stop putting them up in our public places, okay? | ||
Anchored by a wide base. | ||
That's one way to put it. | ||
I'm not fat. | ||
I'm anchored by a wide base. | ||
Anchored by a wide base, the woman in grounded with the stars. | ||
Is she grounding the stars? | ||
Is she an angry mother? | ||
Is that what's happening? | ||
Invites passerbys to gawk and engage. | ||
Gawk we will. | ||
Gawk we will. | ||
unidentified
|
Target engaged. | |
Gawk and gag. | ||
We'll be gawking and gagging. | ||
Standing in stark contrast to Duffy Stair's two other permanent statues, both of men. | ||
Unlike those, she wears everyday clothes. | ||
Her stance is subtle nod to Michelangelo's David. | ||
unidentified
|
*Footsteps* | |
Oh, man. | ||
This is great. | ||
The statue of the woman was woven from observations, images, and open calls that happened across New York, Los Angeles, and London. | ||
Took three cities? | ||
I could take a picture of her at the DMV. | ||
Where were you going from New York to Los Angeles to London to figure out? | ||
It is a bored-looking, generic, dead-eyed black woman. | ||
What are we doing here? | ||
Alongside the massive sculpture, Passerby should be on the lookout for another work by Price, this one on display across the neighborhood screens. | ||
Man series, a stop-motion animation set to play on billboards nightly in May, also involves a sculptural installation that foregrounds the intrinsic value of the individual and amplifies traditionally marginalized bodies on a monumental scale. | ||
Well, what would we do without you? | ||
Times Square stands as an iconic symbol inside of convergence, uniting people from all walks of life, individual stories and experiences intersecting on a global platform, said Price in an official statement. | ||
I mean, I'm serious. | ||
Who likes this? | ||
Can we open up a hotline? | ||
I need a black woman to call in and explain to me how this makes her feel. | ||
Are you feeling honored? | ||
Or are you feeling mocked? | ||
I would feel mocked, personally. | ||
I wouldn't even care that much. | ||
And hey, look. | ||
It's better than the literal demon women that they've been putting up. | ||
That crazy one with the snake hair. | ||
The literal demon statue that they're putting up everywhere, you know, it's better than that. | ||
Medusa? | ||
It wasn't Medusa, though. | ||
Some other weird... | ||
Maybe it was Medusa, but I feel like it was like a literal demon, like some, you know, Necronomicon has her name somewhere. | ||
unidentified
|
Or the just literal statues of Satan they're putting up. | |
Yeah, statues of Satan they're putting up. | ||
And, you know, the other option. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, here we go. | |
Here we go. | ||
You have the one? | ||
I mean, I've seen so many. | ||
Yeah, that one. | ||
That's what I'm talking about. | ||
Yeah, no, her arms are weird tentacles. | ||
So, like, at least it's better than that. | ||
I guess. | ||
I guess. | ||
I mean, it doesn't cause quite the visceral reaction that this one does, so it has that going for it. | ||
unidentified
|
It's Greta Thunberg's final form. | |
Greta Thunberg's final form? | ||
No, Greta Thunberg's final form was the little girl statue. | ||
Like, why are all modern statues so retarded? | ||
Remember the little girl statue standing in front of the bull? | ||
Fearless girl statue? | ||
Just a bull about to stomp her to death? | ||
She's just like... | ||
A monument to feminism's... | ||
Flagrant disregard of reality. | ||
And like even you just... | ||
It's like a thing with my wife and I. Anytime we're out in public and you just see some statue or something, we just look at each other like... | ||
It's just everything. | ||
Especially around Austin. | ||
There's always these modern statues. | ||
And it's like you can tell. | ||
They spend millions of dollars. | ||
The Austin airport is full of these things. | ||
Where it's like these giant monumental statues and it's just like, yes, this one is a giant sack of testicles. | ||
Isn't it beautiful? | ||
And you're just like, no. | ||
What is this? | ||
Why is this assaulting my eyes in the middle of my city? | ||
Why? | ||
What is this? | ||
Well, you see, this is a giant cube. | ||
Okay, and what does it mean? | ||
Nothing great. | ||
No, it's subverting your expectations. | ||
So your expectation is that art should be beautiful and meaningful and aesthetic and nice. | ||
We subvert that expectation by making something pointless and offensive and meaningless. | ||
Aren't we brilliant? | ||
Incredible. | ||
Let's go to this video. | ||
I'm sorry to the callers. | ||
I will go to your calls very quickly. | ||
I always feel bad if I say new callers and I leave them on hold for a long time. | ||
But I mean, come on, you guys. | ||
Come on. | ||
What is this? | ||
Let's go to this video real quick of people in Times Square reacting to this. | ||
What do you think? | ||
I bet they all love it. | ||
I bet they all love it. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
A new statue in Times Square is told, as we're told, turning heads. | |
It's making people not only stop and stare, but also reflect a rare feat in the middle of one of the busiest places in the world. | ||
Zinia Maldonado shows us why. | ||
Yeah, we're reflecting. | ||
Let's pause it. | ||
Yeah, yeah, we're reflecting. | ||
No, when I saw that, I had to sit down for a minute. | ||
Reflect about what the hell has gone wrong here? | ||
What's happened to us? | ||
We all need to do a little bit of reflecting. | ||
What has happened to our society? | ||
How did we go so far wrong? | ||
Can we all take a moment, really think about in a thoughtful, self-effacing way, why is God so mad at us? | ||
What did we do wrong? | ||
What do we have to repent for? | ||
Yeah, we're all reflecting here. | ||
We see this, and it really makes us question, what the hell has gone wrong and how we undo all of this madness, this ugliness, this pointlessness, the meaninglessness, the offensiveness. | ||
I mean, that is... | ||
Disgusting. | ||
Let's go back to the video. | ||
unidentified
|
12 feet tall in the middle of Times Square stands a bronze sculpture of a young woman. | |
It's instantly stood out. | ||
It's powerful. | ||
It's so tall and big. | ||
The sculpture created by artist Thomas Price was unveiled at Duffy Square last week. | ||
And in just a matter of days, it has stopped hundreds in their tracks. | ||
Who is she? | ||
Well, technically, she's whoever you want her to be. | ||
Yeah, she's nobody. | ||
Me being a plus-size black woman, I kind of looking at it was just like, oh, I wonder what me as a small child would have thought looking at something like that. | ||
Representation. | ||
The piece is part of a series called Grounded in the Stars, which Gene Cooney, director of Times Square Arts says... | ||
Alright, we can take it down. | ||
I really don't care. | ||
Okay, so the obese black woman sees herself reflected in the statue of the obese black woman. | ||
Very deep stuff. | ||
And everybody else is just like, it is big. | ||
For sure. | ||
Very big. | ||
unidentified
|
You know they lead with the best comments, too. | |
Right, they lead with the best comments and literally it's them like, it's uh... | ||
No, it's right there. | ||
It is certainly right there. | ||
It's big. | ||
It is bronze. | ||
I mean, it's huge. | ||
It's like I can't get away from it. | ||
It's like no matter where I look, I can still see it somehow. | ||
It's big. | ||
It's very big. | ||
It's very tall, for sure. | ||
Yep. | ||
So what do you think about it? | ||
unidentified
|
Big. | |
All right. | ||
Everything sucks. | ||
We suck. | ||
Our country's dying. | ||
And that's just... | ||
Fun little interlude there. | ||
Incredible. | ||
Incredible. | ||
So long, Teddy Roosevelt. | ||
Time for anonymous, dead-eyed black woman in your place so that Blessing Martinez can feel reflected. | ||
Again, are you not insulted? | ||
Are you not offended? | ||
I couldn't find a single black woman to actually do? | ||
Actually make? | ||
You couldn't have her, like, in a toga with this torch holding it up, meaning, you know, embodying the shining the light of liberty, broken chains about her feet, declaration of independence in her hand, something power and meaning that does inspire you. | ||
I mean, just compare. | ||
The Statue of Liberty, whatever the hell that is. | ||
Or the Teddy Roosevelt statue that they just took down. | ||
Or the Thomas Jefferson statue that they just took down. | ||
Of course, those were real men who actually achieved things and deserve to be remembered in history for the lasting influence they've had on humanity as a whole. | ||
But hell, the Statue of Liberty, that's an anonymous woman, right? | ||
But she means something. | ||
She embodies a spirit, a feeling. | ||
Well, I guess this woman does too. | ||
It's just the embodiment. | ||
And the feeling and the expression of just like mediocrity and pointlessness and meaninglessness and nihilistic vapidity. | ||
That's what that represents. | ||
I don't know if I could make a face that... | ||
What's the word for it? | ||
Blank? | ||
That blank. | ||
Should have given her an afro. | ||
I should have given her an afro. | ||
That's my take. | ||
I'm sorry, guys. | ||
I'm sorry to our callers. | ||
I just can't help myself. | ||
Beth in New Hampshire, thank you so much for calling. | ||
Thank you for holding. | ||
You're on the air about Caroline Levitt. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
Thanks for calling in. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Harrison. | |
Yeah, I just wanted to just sort of give her a shout-out. | ||
She's from my home state here in New Hampshire, live free or die, and she is a badass. | ||
She's graceful, she's fearless, and I just think she needs to get some credit. | ||
So I just wanted to say that. | ||
But also, second... | ||
Just curious if anybody's noticed, there seems to be some pre-programming. | ||
I've been watching that show Paradise on ABC. | ||
I'm three episodes in. | ||
So far, the East Coast has been hit by a tsunami. | ||
There's nuclear attacks, and they're currently living in an underground city, just like Catherine Austin Fitz was talking about on Tucker Carlson's show. | ||
So, just wanted to... | ||
Point that out. | ||
I hadn't even heard of that. | ||
It's a new show called Paradise? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it's on ABC. | |
I was streaming it, so there's only three episodes available so far, but a good one to take a peek at. | ||
And then also, on NBC's SVU, they've been talking a lot about the satanic child torture and abuse. | ||
The last one, they had a child that had been kidnapped, Brought her up to a farm in upstate New York, and they were shocking her on video with a dog collar. | ||
Just horrible things. | ||
So, you know, the pre-programming on these network shows is pretty in our face, especially if you know what's going on. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
You know, one of the things about that is those shows, I mean, they've been going on for decades. | ||
There's like 10 of the same show, basically, right? | ||
All this, SVU and CSI, all those. | ||
Sort of the same things over and over. | ||
SVU especially, it's always like stories ripped from the headlines, right? | ||
And so what they do is they find crime stories in the news and then write a plot around it. | ||
And of course, it's a police procedural. | ||
So by the end of the episode, it's always wrapped up in a nice little bow. | ||
Don't need to worry about it. | ||
So I think if nothing else, subconsciously sort of training people to be like, oh, these horrible things that you're hearing about. | ||
Don't worry about it. | ||
We're on it. | ||
Our guys, we wrap it up in 30 minutes. | ||
It's no big deal. | ||
We always solve the crimes and save the people and get the bad guys. | ||
So don't worry about the satanic pedophile gangs. | ||
That's just, it's entertainment for you. | ||
So yeah, there's definitely, there's a sort of feedback loop that goes on there. | ||
I hadn't heard of Paradise. | ||
Thank you for that suggestion. | ||
And yeah, I agree with Caroline, with your comments about Caroline Levitt. | ||
And she's young too, right? | ||
Isn't she like 23 or something ridiculous? | ||
unidentified
|
I think she's 26 or 27, but she's smart. | |
She is a woman of faith, and she's just proud to see somebody from our great state over here live free or die, like I said. | ||
I know it shows blue on the map in New Hampshire, but I can assure you that's not really the mindset of most people. | ||
It's a gun-toting blue. | ||
It's a gun-toting blue, isn't it? | ||
Well, thank you very much for the call. | ||
I totally agree. | ||
She is fantastic. | ||
I didn't realize she was from New Hampshire, but yeah, she's got... | ||
She exudes confidence in a way that is very sincere. | ||
I really do like it. | ||
She has a long and successful career ahead of her, I think. | ||
Let's stay in the north-northeast. | ||
Corn Pop from Maine. | ||
I know I said I want a new college, but Corn Pop is involved in some very big deals there in Maine. | ||
Go ahead, Corn Pop. | ||
We've got two minutes left in the segment. | ||
The floor is yours, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, man. | |
And I don't know if you guys have heard, but there is a teacher up here, a high school English teacher that called for the assassination of Donald Trump and called for the assassination of all his supporters and all that live on her Facebook. | ||
And I actually reached out to her when the news broke and actually had her on a live podcast. | ||
And some of the things that this teacher was saying is crazy. | ||
I've already sent all the clips to you on X in your inbox. | ||
I mean, for one, she called her students ignorant. | ||
She doubled down about how she wanted a bullet in Trump's head. | ||
She made the comment where she said that if the only thing that comes out of this is for her to call to the assassination of Donald Trump, then she feels like her job is done. | ||
Well, you gotta love it when they tell the truth, huh, Corn Pop? | ||
I mean, that's insane, but it's like... | ||
The crazy thing is, if one person is saying this, 10,000 people are thinking it, right? | ||
A million people are thinking it. | ||
So, you know, I almost appreciate when leftists just come out and talk like this because it lets us actually understand where they're at mentally. | ||
Here's a couple things you've sent me from the main wire. | ||
Waterville teacher calls for Trump supporters to be assassinated. | ||
If I had the skill set required, I'd take them out myself. | ||
Isn't that the perfect statement for these lefties? | ||
If I had an ability, I would do something. | ||
Yeah, I bet, lady. | ||
I bet. | ||
So she's calling for violence against Trump and Trump supporters. | ||
Is she still a high school teacher? | ||
She hasn't been fired, has she? | ||
unidentified
|
She has yet to be fired. | |
She has yet to be arrested. | ||
There was actually a Waterville man during the Biden administration that made the similar post that was actually arrested for this exact same thing. | ||
I don't understand why she's not arrested, why she's not fired. | ||
I've reached out to the school. | ||
My kid goes to that school. | ||
Granted, he's only in kindergarten, so he's not in the same classroom, but I have yet to hear back from the school about this teacher. | ||
Wow. | ||
No, she literally, that's crazy. | ||
I have the post here. | ||
Joanne St. Germain. | ||
I'll retweet this right now so people can find it, and we'll have to clip out, because we don't have time to play an hour-long conversation, but I'd love to hear some of y 'all's conversation about that. | ||
Corn Pop in Maine. | ||
Follow him now at PWA 1776 on X. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
Third hour is on. | ||
We'll go directly out to your calls. | ||
We have Paul in Florida. | ||
Paul in Florida, thanks for calling in about missing kids. | ||
Pizzagate, of all things? | ||
That debunked conspiracy theory, Paul? | ||
That totally crazy idea that the elite in Washington, D.C. are involved in some sort of child sex trafficking, schnuddy stuff? | ||
What do you got for us, Paul? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, first, I don't know why you've got to be so critical of the hoochie mama and her spandex statue, okay? | |
Waiting for her next victim. | ||
But, yeah, the Pizzagate thing. | ||
Alex was actually probably about a month ago talking to someone and they're like, "It was debunked. | ||
There's no basement." Well, true, there wasn't. | ||
But right next door is Bucks Fishing and Camping, owned by James Alifantus, the same guy. | ||
They have a basement. | ||
I'm thinking that hard drive was probably, let's see, the DNC server was never looked at by the FBI, probably for a network. | ||
Going to Vatican, probably the royal family. | ||
There's your whole network. | ||
Yeah, I mean, Pizzagate is one of the strangest occurrences of all time. | ||
And it was never about that pizza place in particular. | ||
It was never like, oh, if that pizza place doesn't have a basement, then the whole thing is fake. | ||
They have never answered the question, what was meant by a pizza-related map? | ||
What was meant by $65,000 worth of hot dogs flown from Chicago? | ||
What was meant by The kids are being dropped off for your entertainment in the hot tub. | ||
I mean, these are, you know, these, what I'm saying is not verbatim, but these were verbatim quotes taken from, you know, official confirmed emails of people like John Podesta, people like Hillary Clinton. | ||
Never been explained. | ||
They've sort of shrugged it off and said, you're crazy for asking, but we've done the calculations. | ||
I don't have them now, but you can use AI. | ||
How many hot dogs will $65,000 buy you? | ||
And we did the math. | ||
It was like, I can't remember what detail we went into, but it was like, you know, you could find the party that it was talking about, and it was like, okay, there were 300 people there, so you could order, you know, whatever, 65 million hot dogs with that much money, and so did they all eat 1,000 hot dogs, or was that code for something? | ||
The walnut sauce. | ||
I mean, these things have never been explained. | ||
So then some random dude goes into a pizza place, shoots one bullet, it hits the hard drive of the computer at the pizza place, and now you're not allowed to talk about it because violent event and you're encouraging terrorism by asking questions. | ||
So, yeah, Pizzagate's never been debunked. | ||
It's been derailed. | ||
It was distracted from and convoluted, but... | ||
The basis of Pizzagate were WikiLeaks releases of verified emails containing a lot of messages that have never been explained adequately. | ||
So, yeah, absolutely, Pizzagate is real. | ||
unidentified
|
One more thing. | |
If you get a chance, check out Megyn Kelly's interview of James Alaphanta. | ||
You'll be insulted. | ||
It was such a softball. | ||
He was condescending. | ||
It's so fake. | ||
His name is French for I love children. | ||
It's so crazy! | ||
unidentified
|
Not a surprise. | |
I mean, crew, pull up Google Translate, type I love children, and translate it to French. | ||
What does it say? | ||
Je t 'aime les fontes. | ||
Crazy, but it's true. | ||
I mean, I don't know what else to tell you. | ||
I'm not claiming he's anything. | ||
I'm just saying his name is French for I love children. | ||
Sacre bleu. | ||
We'll go now to George in James LeSafonte. | ||
I'm telling you, his name is James LeSafonte. | ||
A little strange. | ||
A little strange. | ||
George in California, thank you for calling in on Line 8 about the Pakistan-Indian War. | ||
Go ahead, George. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, my brother Harrison. | |
How are you, man? | ||
I'm good, sir. | ||
And you know what? | ||
We're actually about to go to break. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I forgot we were in this short segment. | ||
So stay on the line, George, and we'll go back to you just as soon as we get back. | ||
Sorry. | ||
Sorry to tease you like that, but I didn't want you to get started and have to interrupt you. | ||
So we'll be back on the other side with the third hour of American Journal. | ||
Go to thealexjonesstore.com to support everything that we do here because Pete's Gate hasn't been debunked. | ||
In fact, nothing we've ever covered has been debunked. | ||
Can I say that? | ||
Can I go out on a limb and say that? | ||
I just did. | ||
Stay tuned. | ||
We'll be back in 90 seconds. | ||
unidentified
|
You're tuned in to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
I'm telling you, folks, I'm telling you, I don't know what's happening. | ||
I don't know what's going on. | ||
unidentified
|
Looking back on the track for a little greenback. | |
If you've been in our sphere for the past couple decades... | ||
You're probably like me, where 15 years ago you thought, we live in an empire of lies. | ||
This is crazy. | ||
Everybody's so dishonest. | ||
It can't go on like this. | ||
And here we are, decades later, and everything is so freaking crazy. | ||
I'm going to show you a video in this segment. | ||
It'll break your heart. | ||
It'll break your heart for poor old Joe Biden. | ||
To learn what he thinks is going on in the world. | ||
It's very strange, but yeah, just the amount of blatant delusion that we are dealing with is really something else. | ||
It's inexpressible. | ||
George from California, my friend. | ||
Thank you for calling in. | ||
Thank you for holding over. | ||
You're on the air, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you for having me, brother. | |
As always, God bless you and the crew. | ||
How much I appreciate you guys and your work. | ||
Thank you, George. | ||
Likewise. | ||
unidentified
|
My pleasure, my man. | |
Brother, you know how I speak. | ||
I speak in morality senses generally. | ||
And this thing with the Pakistan-India conflict, it kind of ties into something else that's going on that I've noticed, and that was the Gifts and Go debacle, which I'm sorry to say, brother, my family hit a little snag. | ||
I know you guys don't promote other people's Gifts and Go, but I'm about to probably start one. | ||
So God willing, that one is fruitful for me and my family. | ||
Oh, I would definitely keep me in the loop, George. | ||
I'd be happy to retweet it and cover it here on the show. | ||
unidentified
|
God bless you, brother. | |
I will. | ||
It's the broken criminal justice system making innocent people into criminals, as we saw with our brother Owen Schroyer. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I'm sorry to hear that. | ||
unidentified
|
God bless you, brother. | |
The thing that I wanted to tie into that idea, brother, is the senseless and disgusting pawn that they have put in place, Satan and his minions. | ||
That making people, like, fall into this notion that they're the good guys. | ||
So, in this sense, the criminal justice system. | ||
In this case, now we have all these, I guess, for lack of a better term, the forever wars. | ||
You see it in Armenia and Artsakh. | ||
You see it now in Pakistan and India, the Ukraine and Russia thing. | ||
They've got these little ticking time bombs, like, peppered everywhere. | ||
And God bless you, Harrison. | ||
You're the first person, brother, I heard, like, speak on this because it's been bouncing around in my mind for years. | ||
I'm like, folks, can you not see? | ||
These are just things put in place by the establishment so that whenever they meet, these are their cop-outs to divert your attention, like the dog and pony show. | ||
What was the term you used? | ||
The smoke and mirrors one time? | ||
Like the magic trick? | ||
Yeah, the puff of smoke. | ||
unidentified
|
Exactly. | |
The puff of smoke. | ||
And this I just see as another one of those things where it just goes to show they have so many bases covered, but at the same time, brother, you know what I always keep saying? | ||
Is as good as they seem to be, is this the best they've got? | ||
They have everything under control, and yet with our God's grace, yet here we still are with all the poison, toxin, and the food, air, and water, we still have God's children out there thriving. | ||
Just showing what good people can do in all of this, the face of evil. | ||
Yeah, you're exactly right. | ||
And look, they injected billions of us with poison. | ||
And we're still kicking along. | ||
And yeah, it's been devastating. | ||
But like, human resilience is incredible. | ||
And it really takes a lot to kill off a single person, let alone... | ||
A bunch of people. | ||
And you're exactly right. | ||
I mean, the amount of control that they have and yet everything they're trying to do is unraveling in real time. | ||
It's righteous. | ||
It's divine is what it is. | ||
And it's absolutely fantastic in a lot of cases. | ||
Even in just, you know, I don't know. | ||
It's sort of a dual feeling where you see this, you know, that blue-haired lady saying, no, Trump supporters ever. | ||
Did that a few minutes. | ||
Like, one half of me obviously rages at the temerity of these people to lie right to our faces. | ||
Obviously, that's despicable and infuriating. | ||
On the other hand, like, how many other lies have they told in the past and we had no idea? | ||
There was no internet, so there was no communication that people could express the truth and get these stories out nationwide. | ||
I mean, they really can't get away with this anymore. | ||
It's like they're still acting like we don't know. | ||
We're still acting like they can just say things. | ||
And we don't have the evidence right there to counter everything they say. | ||
So it's an amazing process we're all going through. | ||
Thank you very much for the call, George. | ||
And I hope your family's doing better. | ||
And I'd be happy to share your give, send, go, of course. | ||
And the least I can do, George is a great repeater station for InfoWars. | ||
He's always posting our links and our streams and sharing our content. | ||
So we cannot express how much we appreciate people who do that. | ||
We know. | ||
We know you don't gain anything from it. | ||
Well, you could. | ||
You could gain from it. | ||
You should be making money from it. | ||
We don't care how you get the information out there. | ||
Just get the information out there, and we love it. | ||
And George does a great job with that, so I'd love to help you out in return. | ||
I got a couple videos before we go back out to calls. | ||
Two breaking videos here. | ||
We'll go to the Biden one I mentioned in just a second. | ||
But first, AG Pambandi has given a statement about the Epstein files. | ||
She was questioned, looks like, on the White House driveway. | ||
Where she was asked about the Epstein releases. | ||
I haven't even reported on it recently because every day there's multiple rumors, some are announcements, but it's like they're about to release the Epstein documents. | ||
Actually, they're not releasing them. | ||
People keep saying, and I don't think it's true, people keep going, Kash Patel refuses to release them because they'll result in a rise in anti-Semitism. | ||
I don't think that's true, but that's one of the things that's been going around. | ||
They're like, we have thousands of people on it. | ||
We're doing it every day. | ||
And then they're like, but there's no timeline for release. | ||
We might never release it. | ||
Somebody just yesterday said, actually, the Epstein files don't exist anymore. | ||
They're totally non-existent. | ||
And the FBI destroyed them. | ||
So it's like, so it's just been a cacophony of madness. | ||
Different information from every different angle. | ||
Here's Pam Bondi herself just about an hour ago. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
James Palmer said yesterday that all the Epstein files are missing. | |
No, no, the FBI, yeah, the FBI, they're reviewing, there are tens of thousands of videos. | ||
of Epstein with children or child porn. | ||
And there are hundreds of victims. | ||
And no one victim will ever get released. | ||
It's just the volume. | ||
And that's what they're going through right now. | ||
The FBI is diligently going through that. | ||
I haven't seen that statement, but I'll call him later and find out. | ||
Yeah, so they're asking about that statement I just referenced where somebody said, yeah, there are no Epstein files. | ||
The FBI destroyed them. | ||
She sort of laughs at that and says, no, they're there. | ||
There's tens of thousands of them. | ||
And that's the first thing she said that kind of made sense to me. | ||
She's like, it's child porn. | ||
We're not just going to release it. | ||
I was like, okay, that makes sense, actually. | ||
That actually does make sense. | ||
Please do block all that out for us. | ||
I'm fine with those redactions. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
So there's Pam Bondi, again insisting it's happening. | ||
The files are not lost. | ||
They are coming out. | ||
The FBI is diligently going through them. | ||
I guess we'll keep twiddling our thumbs. | ||
Here's Joe Biden, and again, this is what I mean. | ||
You'll get what I'm saying when I'm just like, I don't know how we've gotten to this point. | ||
Joe Biden makes a statement about him dropping out of the race. | ||
Now, this whole scenario... | ||
I don't even know if I need to try to explain it, because if you are on our side, if you're watching our show, if you know what reality is, I don't need to tell you. | ||
If you don't, by this point, you might be too lost for me to even convince. | ||
But you've got people like Jake Tapper writing a book about the cover-up of Joe Biden's mental state where you can go back in time and find clip after clip after clip of him, Jake Tapper himself, talking to members of the Trump family when they say, yeah, Biden doesn't look very competent. | ||
And he's going, oh, so you can just diagnose him? | ||
You're not a doctor. | ||
How dare you? | ||
How dare you say that about Biden? | ||
You know, Trump crazy. | ||
Are you doing that now? | ||
I mean, so you've got people who carried out the cover-up writing a book about the cover-up as if it was against them. | ||
I mean, it's all just madness. | ||
Just pure, unrelenting madness. | ||
Because from the objective, reality-based point of view, we all saw what happened. | ||
Biden was incompetent. | ||
The media covered it up. | ||
The administration came up with absurd and ridiculous excuses for his incredibly bizarre behavior that the media pretended to buy, pretended to understand and agree with and think is really smart and clever. | ||
Remember, here's the cheap fake. | ||
This is the video that caused Corrine Jean-Pierre to say there are cheap fakes out there trying to play on the fear of AI that people had. | ||
Try to claim this was fake somehow when it's literally uncut video of Joe Biden getting lost. | ||
So we don't need to go over it, but it's just there's a new wrinkle. | ||
There's a new twist in this story, and it's what Biden thinks was happening at the time. | ||
Let's go to Joe Biden. | ||
Do we have this video? | ||
Did I even put it in? | ||
All right. | ||
Here's Biden explaining why he walked away from the... | ||
Presidential candidacy last year. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
Should you have withdrawn earlier, given someone else a bigger charge? | |
I don't think it would have mattered. | ||
We left at a time when we had a good candidate. | ||
She was fully funded. | ||
They wanted this person to be our president. | ||
unidentified
|
I had become... | |
What we had set out to do, no one thought we could do. | ||
And become so successful on our agenda, it was hard to say, now I'm going to stop now. | ||
He was just so successful. | ||
It was just, he was so successful, he had to drop out. | ||
Yeah, that's what really happened. | ||
He wasn't forced out by Kamala. | ||
It wasn't Obama forcing Biden out, thinking that he could find a dark horse candidate to replace before Kamala sees the reins. | ||
It wasn't that his administration published his resignation on his ex by PDF before he was even aware that that's what he was doing. | ||
I don't think it would have mattered. | ||
They wanted that man to be our president. | ||
The media that you listen to that claims to have your best interests in mind wanted that man to be negotiating with Iran and China. | ||
To be presiding over the wars in Ukraine and Israel and now India and Pakistan. | ||
That's who they wanted in charge. | ||
And they repeatedly, browbeat us, told us over and over. | ||
Insulted us for daring to be so rude as to question his mental capacity. | ||
Here he is three months into the new administration and he's worse than he's ever been. | ||
But according to him, he dropped out because he was just so successful. | ||
Just so successfully had to drop out of the race, so wrap your mind around that, folks. | ||
He truly is. | ||
He is the Seinfeld of presidential candidates. | ||
Because of his penchant for young girls. | ||
All right, let's go out to your calls now. | ||
Brandon in Tucson wants to talk about immigration in Arizona. | ||
Thanks for calling in. | ||
Brandon, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, what's going on, Harrison? | |
Nice. | ||
unidentified
|
I disagree with your tweet last week where I want so many deportation numbers that I noticed traffic getting left. | |
Right. | ||
unidentified
|
But, yeah, no, it's just I don't understand why it's not getting any better. | |
It can't be that hard to just hire more immigration people down here. | ||
Me and a couple of buddies have even applied for Border Patrol. | ||
Nothing. | ||
This really pisses me off when I go to Walmart and the deodorant's locked up behind a piece of glass. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Turns out if you don't put the criminals in prison, you have to live in a prison. | ||
It's by design, obviously. | ||
Is it time to start leaning on the Congress and the Senate? | ||
Because it seems like, you know, I don't want to give the excuse of like, well, Trump can't do anything because the Senate and Congress isn't doing anything. | ||
I don't think that's true. | ||
I do think that you could just do this. | ||
I mean, again, Where did all the appropriations for all of the funding? | ||
Did we not play video earlier today? | ||
$600 million every two to three months to one NGO, Jewish Family Services, to bring in immigrants? | ||
If you gave me $600 million a year, I think I could deport everybody. | ||
I think I could get it done. | ||
I think the money's there. | ||
I think the will is not there. | ||
So do we demand that Congress and the Senate, you know, force this issue? | ||
Because obviously they haven't been pulling their weight, and they could, you know, give the money necessary. | ||
I don't know what the holdup is, but I'm as frustrated as you are, Brandon. | ||
I want to see tangible results. | ||
I want the signs in my neighborhood to go back to English. | ||
That's what I want. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, exactly. | |
Remember when I voted, my I Voted sticker was in Spanish here. | ||
Yo Vote, yeah. | ||
You live in Mexico now. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I mean, they just gotta ramp it up, because, I mean, we only got four years. | |
I mean, they gotta be doing at least five million a year. | ||
We have nine months at this point. | ||
We don't have four years. | ||
We have nine months, because by the time the midterms really get going, it's gonna be too politically dangerous to, like, really push hard for mass deportations, because no matter what, the mass deportations, you're gonna be deporting families, you're gonna be deporting mothers, you're gonna be deporting little kids, like... | ||
That's who came across. | ||
That's who you're going to be deporting. | ||
And that's going to be a lot of fodder for the media. | ||
Crying children. | ||
It's never a good look politically. | ||
So we have nine months. | ||
At the most, we have nine months to really make a dent in this. | ||
So I am not seeing it whatsoever, Brandon. | ||
unidentified
|
Speaking of the children, all the hospitals here are on the edge of bankruptcy because they all keep having kids at the hospitals and no one can pay for it. | |
Right. | ||
No, they had to bail out the Denver hospital. | ||
The Denver hospital was about to collapse, and they had to be bailed out for like $200 million because illegal immigrants just go into the hospital whenever they don't feel good and get free service that would cost you $5,000. | ||
They just get it for free, and then you pay for it through your tax dollars. | ||
But, you know, again, if you actually have to pay for your own health care, you might be a little bit more hesitant to go to the hospital, but if everything health care is free, Stub your toe, go to the hospital. | ||
Get a headache, go to the hospital. | ||
Like, why not? | ||
It's free for you. | ||
It's good service. | ||
And the taxpayers foot the bill. | ||
So, we should be ejecting all of these people in just a shockingly rapid clip. | ||
But we're not. | ||
So, it's extremely frustrating. | ||
We're turning down patients. | ||
Denver Hospital's system may collapse due to migrant crisis. | ||
But what do you expect? | ||
But what else? | ||
What other outcome could there possibly be? | ||
Right? | ||
If these people were prosperous contributors to society, they never would have been let in. | ||
Understand, the reason they opened the border, the reason they are flooding our country, is because the people they're bringing in are causing problems and costing us money. | ||
Just understand, it's an attack. | ||
It's an attack against us. | ||
If these were all Norwegian engineers, they'd be turned away at the border with no hesitation and sent back immediately. | ||
These people are brought in because they're a drain on the system, because they don't contribute to society, because they cause greater problems, cost more money, and require greater control to deal with. | ||
So it's all very obvious. | ||
It's a very obvious plan. | ||
Thanks so much for the call, Brandon. | ||
Let's go now to Abraham in Staten Island. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Abraham. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Good morning. | |
Harrison, your intellectual nourishment every day is a highlight of my day. | ||
Followed by what Alex and Owen provide us with. | ||
It's just the only healthy information that's really worthy of consumption. | ||
And I literally consume it all day. | ||
And I just became a VIP member. | ||
I'd like to find out what your two favorite songs are. | ||
Please reveal that. | ||
I want to make a nice song for American Journal. | ||
And I want to say that Pam Bondi is sitting on... | ||
More than a trillion dollars worth of branding impact. | ||
When she starts to reveal the identities in the Sean Combs case and the Jeffrey Epstein case, those names that are the front people for every big media product and television, radio and film and Hollywood, | ||
70% of the A-list celebrities are on those tapes and are clients of those events and are documented doing things that you don't want your children to support Sony anymore. | ||
Because all the Sony artists are fiends when you see this. | ||
And so on and so forth. | ||
It's over a trillion dollars worth of impact to all the corporate interests that are invested in all those artists. | ||
That's the main reason why I'm getting on it. | ||
Yeah, no, that is an extremely good point. | ||
And yeah, it's... | ||
It's kind of hard to know because we've got wars cropping up across the world and all this other stuff, and it's like, do we really want to spend time talking about the orgies that rappers are having? | ||
But as you point out, these are the people that kids are listening to. | ||
It's who they're spending money on. | ||
There's a reason why these people put themselves at this risk, engage in behavior that could send them to jail for decades, and it's because they get something in return. | ||
They get control. | ||
They get to manipulate the culture. | ||
But it's kind of hard for me. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Personally, I'm always like, I'm going to talk about the war starting rather than the perversion of P. Diddy. | ||
But you're right that it is an important thing and the corporate interests are probably scrambling behind the scenes like we've never seen before. | ||
Because you're right, this is billions of dollars worth of material going down the drain. | ||
I'm going to say my Two favorite songs since you asked. | ||
I don't know. | ||
These are the ones that jump to my head right now. | ||
Shadow Stabbing by Cake and maybe 16 Military Wives by The Decembrists. | ||
I really like those two songs. | ||
If that gives you a hint. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I'm going to cook something up. | |
And is it really... | ||
It really is. | ||
I really want you to just walk away from this and bring this back to your family. | ||
That somebody called and told you that your intellectual tone that you set with your difficult-to-process downloads, because you're giving us some hard realities, but your delivery is so smooth that we're not traumatized by the information. | ||
So we're able to grasp important facts and not be traumatized. | ||
Because your interpretation tones it down to such a nourishing product, and I love it. | ||
Well, I really appreciate that, because I do consciously try to maintain the more upbeat attitude, and people sometimes ask me how I don't get more mad talking about this stuff. | ||
For one thing, I'm, you know... | ||
I'm not about to try to compete with the two best angry ranters in the history of the world, Alex Jones and Owen Schroer. | ||
I'm not about to go toe-to-toe with those guys. | ||
But the real reason is because this is fun. | ||
It's fun to fight the globalists. | ||
It's fun to expose their lies. | ||
It's fun to say things you're not supposed to say and challenge them to come at you. | ||
It's fun to tell the truth and have the evidence to back it up. | ||
It would be miserable to be one of these people that we talk about every day, desperately just treading water, trying to keep your head above the constant deluge of lies that you're having to swim in. | ||
It's freeing and amazing and beautiful being able to come up here, have this amazing platform, be talking to this amazing audience, and exposing these despicable scumbags. | ||
And I've said it before, it's like as a fan of history, you'd read back in time about these figures. | ||
In ancient Rome, you know, combating each other verbally in the forum. | ||
And it was like the entertainment of the day and these, you know, speeches that they would give were carved into stone and passed on thousands of years. | ||
And I'd always be like, man, wouldn't that be, you know, could you imagine? | ||
Could you imagine actually watching Cicero try a case or watching Julius Caesar give a speech and debate, you know, Mark Anthony about something? | ||
Like, you look back in time, you think like, man, what a... | ||
What an amazing time period that would have been. | ||
Or 1776, being in the Independence Hall and hearing the debates between the founding fathers. | ||
Wouldn't that have been amazing? | ||
That's what we're doing here. | ||
X is the public forum. | ||
This is Independence Hall. | ||
We are having these conversations and these debates that are changing the world. | ||
So, forget history, man. | ||
We're here, and it's amazing. | ||
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You're listening to The American Journal with your host. | |
Harrison Smith. | ||
I have to say, I'm just imagining future archaeologists digging up 12-foot bronze statues of bored-looking black women a thousand years from now. | ||
They're going to be confused. | ||
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They're going to be very confused, folks. | |
I think some of the coolest images ever are these images where, like, a flood will wash away topsoil and you see it's, like, mythical. | ||
You'll see some Greek god, like, shoulders and head above the ground. | ||
He's, like, rising from the earth and it's just, like, so epic and incredible. | ||
And now I'm imagining a thousand years from now the black with a bored-looking black woman who, like, looks like she's, like, About time you dig me up. | ||
About time you got here. | ||
I've been waiting. | ||
It's like, my God. | ||
What are they going to think? | ||
What are people in the future going to think? | ||
Well, I guess we won't have to worry about it if we stick on the current trajectory. | ||
No history to, no future to concern ourselves with. | ||
We all just die. | ||
We're going to go out to your phone calls more in this second segment, but we have some breaking news. | ||
And I'm very, very happy, very happy to once again, and in an occurrence all too rare, celebrate powerful success from the FBI under Cash Patel and Pam Bondi. | ||
Because as much as we, I don't even want to say complain, but just our urging urgency, our pushing for rapidity in these actions, I'm, of course, happy to celebrate it when they achieve results. | ||
205 arrested in FBI child sex operation Patel and Bondi announced. | ||
Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Cash Patel announced Wednesday that 205 alleged child sex predators who preyed on children online have been arrested in the last week. | ||
Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Cash Patel announced Wednesday. | ||
That 205 alleged child sexual predators who preyed on children online had been arrested in just the last week. | ||
Operation Restored Justice saw 115 children across the country rescued in the process. | ||
Bondi called the operation historic and unprecedented. | ||
These depraved human beings, if convicted, will face the maximum penalty of in prison some life. | ||
I think that's misquoted, but they're going down. | ||
They're going down is the point, and they have gone down. | ||
Bondi writes on X, the Department of Justice will never stop fighting to protect children and we will not rest until we find and prosecute every child predator who preys on the most vulnerable. | ||
Thank you, FBI, for the incredible work. | ||
This in response to FBI Director Cash Patel's tweet saying, I can now join Pam Bondi and the Justice Department in announcing the arrest of over 200 alleged child sex predators in the last week. | ||
This was a... | ||
Surging operation, he says, quietly conducted across 55 field offices to take down criminals who target kids. | ||
We call this operation Restore Justice. | ||
Our agents, including teams and partners, did excellent work rescuing 115 children. | ||
We actually have a video of this announcement. | ||
A historic triumph. | ||
115 children rescued. | ||
115 children who until this moment had been living in unimaginable, deplorable conditions. | ||
That we don't even need to get into, but just understand. | ||
In the same way that a thousand deaths is a statistic, one is a tragedy, 115 rescued children is just a statistic, but think about every one of those individual situations and the horrifying crimes being committed that have now been stopped thanks to the FBI prioritizing actual criminals rather than People who protest abortion say. | ||
Things like that. | ||
So here's Pam Bondi and Kash Patel today with this announcement of this triumphant arrest of hundreds of child predators and the rescue of 115 children themselves. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
First and foremost, to the Department of Justice under General Bondi's leadership and all its components. | ||
Because of your courage, we are here today protecting our most vulnerable, all children. | ||
Thank you, General Bondi. | ||
Thank you to so many of your colleagues here today that do this work tirelessly day in and day out and never get a moment's thanks. | ||
We should acknowledge all of them today. | ||
As the FBI director, I'm humbled to leave some of the greatest men and women in law enforcement. | ||
And I want to thank our 55 field offices, our 90-plus United States Attorney's offices, our CIOS section, our CRIM division here at the Department of Justice, and our field offices throughout the country with lawyers and prosecutors and agents working tirelessly on some of the harshest criminality we've ever seen. | ||
They don't take breaks because our children deserve a free and open society. | ||
I also want to just take a moment to emphasize the priority of this Department of Justice and this FBI, our children. | ||
If you harm our children, you will be given no sanctuary. | ||
There is no place we will not come to hunt you down. | ||
There is no place we will not look for you. | ||
And there is no cage we will not put you in should you do harm to our children. | ||
The prioritization of this administration and General Bondi has made it abundantly clear to child predators, you will be hunted down and you will be prosecuted. | ||
And that is a refreshing thing to hear for the men and women who do this work tirelessly. | ||
And it's also an acknowledgement of the safety that we look forward to bringing America. | ||
As the Attorney General mentioned, there are a couple of cases worth highlighting. | ||
People in places of public trust have violated not only the law, but that public trust. | ||
To include teachers, law enforcement personnel, and other professionals that we look to safeguard our children have not only violated the law, but violated the trust. | ||
In Minneapolis, defendant Jeremy Francis Plonsky, a Minneapolis state trooper and former army reservist, was arrested for producing child sexual abuse material while in uniform. | ||
Not anymore. | ||
In Norfolk, Virginia, defendant Jose Alexis Valdez Sosa, an illegal immigrant from Mexico, again, allegedly arrested for transporting a minor across state lines. | ||
No more. | ||
Another example, right here in Washington, D.C., in the Metropolitan Police Department, Officer Linwood Barnhill, a former already convicted sex offender, was arrested again for exploiting more victims, more children, while on supervised release. | ||
These are just three examples that show you the extent and the depravity. | ||
Of these horrific crimes. | ||
And we need to team up together with the American public to find the rest. | ||
I want to give a special thanks to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children for the tireless work they do in partnering with us. | ||
And again, I want to thank the Department of Justice and all these folks here. | ||
And Pam, thank you for never wavering to defend our children. | ||
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Thank you. | |
Very powerful stuff. | ||
Now, you would think, one would think if they You know, expect things to be normal and reasonable. | ||
You would expect that this would be a bipartisan concern, that we could all get behind the elimination of pedophiles, sex trafficking rings, kidnappers. | ||
But is that true, actually? | ||
Because simultaneously, simultaneous with the bust of this child rape gang, We have this from Infowars.com. | ||
Converse Conference for Therapists aims to mainstream pedophilia as sexual orientation. | ||
To win sympathy, B4UACT states unequivocally that those who identify as minor attracted persons are victims, not perpetrators, treated unjustly, not only by society at large, but by healthcare professionals in particular. | ||
A Maryland-based organization which aims to mainstream pedophilia by treating it not as a psychiatric disorder, but as yet another type of woke identity that must be affirmed, held a conference for mental health professionals for the past week, hoping to change the way they treat their patients who are plagued by pedophilic impulses. | ||
Now, if you feel like this is similar, giving you, you know, deja vu. | ||
Because it looks like they're taking exactly the same tack that transgenderism used to mainstream itself. | ||
You're exactly right. | ||
And I think we should embrace that similarity. | ||
I think the treatments could be analogous. | ||
They could be similar. | ||
They could be the same treatment for both of these conditions. | ||
Castration, of course. | ||
Pedophiles deserve gender-affirming surgery. | ||
They require gender-confirmation health care to prevent them from suffering as minor attracted persons. | ||
I'm not kidding either, by the way. | ||
If you want to be treated like this is a medical issue, Then I think we need to lop off the offending member. | ||
I think that's the only... | ||
We will free you from your pain. | ||
We will liberate you from the impulses that torture you so. | ||
Get on the table, sir. | ||
Get on the table, sir. | ||
It's time for your operation. | ||
It's time to cure you of your minor attracted person condition. | ||
With a scalpel and an ice pack. | ||
The same way that homosexual and later transgender activists have been able to forge broader societal acceptance and secure additional legal rights by insisting that their same-sex attraction or gender dysphoria are immutable traits, pedophiles have banded together to replicate those successes. | ||
To do so, they must first convince mental health care providers and researchers to join them in this quest. | ||
And of course, they're helped out by... | ||
Sociologically manipulative organizations like the Tavistock Institute and others. | ||
They say MAPs face stigma, discrimination, and oppression on multiple levels. | ||
Ideological, institutional, interpersonal, and internalized oppression. | ||
Begins a description of an executive summary supplied by B4UACT. | ||
Stigma manifest in hostile public attitudes, sensationalized rhetoric, and threats of violence, contributing to a myriad of mental health challenges. | ||
They want to have sex with children, and the fact that that horrifying crime offends and appalls people causes them pain. | ||
Is there any crime that doesn't fall under that category? | ||
I mean, if you really, really, really, really, you feel compelled to steal things, but you know that thieves, I mean, they're maligned. | ||
They're discriminated against. | ||
People won't let you hang out in their house or know the code to their safes. | ||
I mean, it's impossible to live with these people discriminating against you, a kleptomaniac. | ||
So, let's just... | ||
For the love of God, can this be the last I ever hear about this? | ||
Can this story right here mark the high water mark, the high water point of whatever this is? | ||
We don't need to argue about this. | ||
We don't need to listen to them. | ||
We don't need to hear their justifications or their arguments or their pleas. | ||
We just don't. | ||
We just don't. | ||
Stop thinking you do. | ||
You're not a good person. | ||
For hearing pedophiles out. | ||
Okay? | ||
Sexual attraction is not something you are compelled to follow. | ||
Again, I'm already violating my own thing. | ||
We're not talking about this. | ||
The answer is no. | ||
The answer is no. | ||
We need to treat this like we treat this, like I treat my son when he tries to negotiate with me about ice cream. | ||
It ain't happening. | ||
You can stop asking. | ||
You can stop asking. | ||
Okay? | ||
The answer is no. | ||
We are the parents. | ||
You are the children. | ||
The answer is no. | ||
Okay? | ||
If you're a pedophile, hide. | ||
That's the only response. | ||
If you're a pedophile, hide that. | ||
Bury it. | ||
Bury your feelings. | ||
Keep them to yourself. | ||
Keep them secret. | ||
Okay? | ||
And frankly, I'm willing to bend the First Amendment on this one. | ||
Okay? | ||
I'm willing. | ||
I'm willing. | ||
Which is more dangerous? | ||
Shouting fire in a crowded theater? | ||
Risking a stampede? | ||
People might get hurt running away. | ||
That's unbearable. | ||
You can't shout fire in a crowded theater. | ||
Or having professional organizations convince psychiatrists to destigmatize pedophilia? | ||
I think there are limitations here. | ||
I think there are limitations. | ||
And I think anybody in public advocating for acceptance of pedophilia needs to be arrested and punished for that. | ||
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Would it surprise you to know that he's already been arrested and punished for being a pedophile? | |
No. | ||
Whoa, hold on. | ||
Wait a second. | ||
Did you say that on air? | ||
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A founding member of the group. | |
As you can see on the first page, you just skipped over that one line. | ||
I know, it's a mind blower. | ||
But yeah, one of the founding members of the group is a convicted pedophile. | ||
Where is this? | ||
As it turns out, one of B4UACT's two co-founders was a convicted child sex offender named Michael Melsheimer. | ||
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Super weird that he's trying to turn it into some normal thing, right? | |
So weird. | ||
So weird how that happens. | ||
How the people arrested for pedophilia then advocate for the acceptance of pedophilia. | ||
I'd like to go a step farther now. | ||
Previously, just a second ago, I said I'm okay with bending the First Amendment. | ||
I'm okay with putting them to death, actually. | ||
Actually, now that I think about it, I think anybody advocating this... | ||
Has to be eliminated. | ||
Legally, hey, I'm not calling for vigilante justice. | ||
I'm not calling for violence against these poor, beleaguered, innocent people. | ||
But I do think they should be arrested and given a lethal injection. | ||
Or as Canada would put it, I think we need to offer them loving end-of-life care. | ||
I think that... | ||
I think that we can bring together these separate leftist influences and whether it's taking the solution and the treatment for transgenderism and applying that to MAPS or accepting the loving and efficient MAID program from Canada. | ||
I think if you want to treat minor attracted persons like a... | ||
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Hey, that's the slogan right there. | |
Maps get made. | ||
Maps get made. | ||
I'm for it. | ||
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Oh my god, we just made a t-shirt. | |
We just made a t-shirt. | ||
Maps get made, or I don't know, I kind of like gender-affirming care for pedophiles. | ||
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We can put that on the back. | |
It's fine. | ||
It's fine. | ||
Gender-affirming care for pedophiles. | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
I mean, good luck. | ||
Okay, so again, just we're not arguing it. | ||
We're not talking about it. | ||
We're not debating it. | ||
We're not hearing you out. | ||
We're not empathizing with you. | ||
We're not pathologizing your perversion. | ||
The answer is no. | ||
The more you talk about it, the angrier I become. | ||
Okay? | ||
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Oh my God, and we could make like a PSA for 20 cents a day. | |
You could what, castrate a pedophile? | ||
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Yes. | |
These pedophiles need your help. | ||
They can't afford the surgeries they need. | ||
But seriously, I mean, if it really is a mental condition, I mean, it's funny because what I'm saying is only half a joke because this is the way that they treat transgenderism, right? | ||
It's like, okay, they believe they're in the wrong body and that causes them psychological pain and so they do physical surgery to cure the psychological pain. | ||
Mind that's wrong. | ||
It's your body that's wrong. | ||
And I've explained this a million times with the transition, pardon the pun, from dysmorphia to dysphoria. | ||
That little change in words, it's all about framing it in a medical context so you can still apply medical solutions and have insurance companies call it and say it's a protected class because it's a medical condition, an immutable characteristic. | ||
All this is embodied in these words, dysmorphia, dysphoria. | ||
Dysmorphia is when your brain is wrong about your body. | ||
Dysphoria is when your body is wrong and your brain is right. | ||
Like as if you were to change body like bulimic, being bulimic or any of those things. | ||
Those are body dysmorphia because while you're incredibly skinny, you look in the mirror and your brain thinks that you're fat. | ||
That's your brain being wrong because you are in fact incredibly skinny. | ||
Dysphoria would be to say No, your brain is right. | ||
Your body is wrong. | ||
It is too fat. | ||
You do need to lose weight, telling that to an anorexic person. | ||
So, I'm not even really joking that, like, if this is a medical condition that causes them pain, and that's where the dys comes in, dysphoria, dysmorphia, it's talking about a pain, and it's whether the pain comes from the fact that your brain is wrong, and that's causing you confusion, and is a source of pain, or that it's like, People don't accept you, and that's causing pain. | ||
It's convoluted, but these are the details that have gotten us to where we are now. | ||
So if these people have a sexual attraction that's causing them pain, then castration is just as legitimate of a cure as it is gender-affirming treatment. | ||
It's the same sort of justification for both of these cures. | ||
That computes. | ||
We must cure maps. | ||
We must provide them the healthcare they require to cure them of their pain. | ||
And hey, we'll try the castration. | ||
If that doesn't work, lucky for you, we have a backup option. | ||
Get in the pod. | ||
Get in the pod. | ||
Breathe deep. | ||
Good night. | ||
Okay. | ||
So, no, the answer is no. | ||
We're not arguing. | ||
We're not debating it. | ||
Thank you for coming to my TED Talk. | ||
Let's go. | ||
One more call here. | ||
Let's go to James in Indiana. | ||
James in Indiana, thanks for calling in. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
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Hey, I figured out the statue. | |
It's Prosecuted Letitia, the biggest crook in New York. | ||
You won't hear that on Fox News. | ||
It's Tish? | ||
That's a statue of old Tish James? | ||
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Oh, yeah, that's it. | |
Hey, I think Alex Rosen is an American hero, and Trump should give him the Medal of Freedom. | ||
One thing I do want to see, though, is President Trump implement strict penalties for corrupt government workers that plant Kid Diddley because I found out that Sherlock and husband they wanted to set him up and frame him by putting that crap on his electronic device the FBI did so I don't trust the FBI at all yeah and You know, on that note, actually, I have this story that I meant to get to today. | ||
FBI used false statements, manipulated known facts during investigation in a 2016 congressional baseball game shooting. | ||
Now, this shooting never got the attention it deserved. | ||
Never got the outrage it deserved. | ||
They tried to kill a large portion of the Republican Party in the Senate. | ||
And it's like, you know, it's different than killing the CEO of UnitedHealthcare, right? | ||
These people kill somebody and it's just like, somebody else is just going to slot into his place. | ||
You're not changing anything. | ||
You kill Rand Paul and five other people in the Republican Senate, that changes the course of history. | ||
That alters what we as Republicans are able to accomplish. | ||
It eliminates powerful forces for good in our government. | ||
This guy went to this congressional baseball game with the intention... | ||
Of slaughtering Republicans. | ||
The FBI covered that up and said in official reports, labeled it as death, as suicide by cop. | ||
They say the only motivation this guy had was he wanted to be killed by police and he just happened to choose. | ||
They covered up a terrorist attack, an assassination attempt that nearly killed Steve Scalise. | ||
Massively injured senators in this country. | ||
And the FBI itself, let alone the media and everybody else around it, downplayed it as if it was just a random coincidence that it happened to be Republican senators at this baseball game. | ||
Do you understand the situation that we're in? | ||
unidentified
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Got one more thing for you, Harrison. | |
Go ahead, please. | ||
unidentified
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Fox last night was going off saying the FBI, they're liars. | |
When are they going to be held accountable? | ||
Also, on May 9th, Stevensville, Michigan, the American Legion will be hosting the January 6th hostages and the Whitmer hoax hostages. | ||
What did the Whitmer hoax teach us? | ||
The government will drug his targets and go to the sex club as the head agent beat his wife for not taking a bunch of dongs. | ||
The feds don't solve crimes. | ||
They manufacture them. | ||
The criminals are doing the prosecuting. | ||
And what did January 6th teach us? | ||
There's no Bill of Rights and the government wiped his butt with the U.S. Constitution. | ||
Capitol Police shot peaceful people in the face with rubber bullets and beat a citizen to death. | ||
Most January 6ers did nothing wrong and were being waved in by the corrupt Capitol Police for entrapment. | ||
Amen, sir. | ||
Amen. | ||
In fact, I didn't even get to that story today. | ||
I'll have to save that for tomorrow. | ||
But Tom Tillis has rejected Ed Martin's nomination for U.S. attorney in D.C. And it all has to do with January 6th. | ||
And that's what he invoked, basically, in saying that he would not vote for Ed Martin, who is a very powerful MAGA prosecutor. | ||
Who was nominated to serve as U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia. | ||
So Tom Tillis has torpedoed that nomination because he might be tied in with the deep state actors that carried out January 6th. | ||
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