Speaker | Time | Text |
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What I'm doing is going out and demonstrating to American people that I have the command of all my faculties, that I don't need notes, I don't need telepron. | ||
I can go out and answer any questions at all. | ||
And so what was happening, though, when Bo died, in May, in 2015, he died in 2015. | ||
unidentified
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There has been a lot of attention paid to language in the report about the president's memory. | |
So let me say a few words about that. | ||
You know, just to speak to the her report really, really quickly. | ||
Special counsel, her is as far as I remember, is a is a obviously a Republican, a prosecutor. | ||
He's not he's not a medical doctor. | ||
He's just not. | ||
It's not for him to speak to. | ||
We interviewed the president and asked him about his recorded statement. | ||
"I just found all the classified stuff downstairs." End quote. | ||
He told us that he didn't remember saying that to his ghostwriter. | ||
He also said he didn't remember finding any classified material in his home after his vice presidency. | ||
And he didn't remember anything about how classified documents about Afghanistan made their way There is nothing relevant or material that our committee can learn from an audio tape, which we cannot learn from the 250 pages of the transcript. | ||
The format... | ||
of the medium does not change the content of the communications. | ||
Did I have this? | ||
unidentified
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This is my possession, Mr. Yes, to give you some context for this, Mr. President, it was found in the front of this notebook. | |
It's on the first page and the notebook was found in the library at the lake house in one of the drawers. | ||
I don't recall how it got back. | ||
Were you aware that you had kept it after your term as vice president? | ||
Did you know that you had it? | ||
I don't know that I knew, but it wouldn't sound something I would have stopped to think about. | ||
unidentified
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Start your tape right now because I'm about to tell you the truth. | |
And F you if you can't handle the truth. | ||
This version of Biden is the best Biden ever. | ||
In fact... | ||
I think he's better than he's ever been. | ||
President Biden has a photographic memory. | ||
Ageism is an issue. | ||
Americans have a rich history of holding people's physical characteristics against them. | ||
Okay, you can ask African Americans. | ||
He's older. | ||
That doesn't mean that he is unfit, and there's a lot of ageism there. | ||
Now, this age attack, this obsession by the right, things are frightening. | ||
You have Wall Street Journal running a horribly sourced piece saying that Biden is unfit. | ||
Dubious Wall Street Journal report. | ||
about the president's acuity. | ||
Shoddy story by The Wall Street Journal questioning Biden's mental fitness. | ||
So they've been gaslighting that Biden's the smartest, greatest photographic memory. | ||
I mean, he's just God on Earth. | ||
Because an oligarchy of special interests are getting away with massive crimes, human trafficking, hundreds of billions stolen with Ukraine, selling our secrets to China. | ||
I mean, they are getting filthy rich and Biden doesn't know what planet he's on. | ||
And the Justice Department has already said because he is... | ||
not cognizant that he can't be tried, but he can be the president. | ||
unidentified
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Should I allow Hunter to give his opening statement first? | |
Doesn't appear Mr. Biden showed up for his public hearing, so we'll recognize. | ||
We're now learning that Hunter Biden is attending some of the president's meetings at the White House. | ||
Since he returned from Camp David last evening with his father, we understand that Hunter Biden has even joined some meetings and conversations that have taken place between the president and some of his most senior advisors and senior staff. | ||
A massive unprecedented scandal. | ||
Involving treason and corruption on a level that 20 years ago would have been a constant media event due to its alarming nature and the implications regarding the national security of the United States of America. | ||
Instead, the Donald Trump lawfare circus takes center stage. | ||
unidentified
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Breaking news out of Donald Trump's legal battle. | |
As a result, the hubris of the powers that be are driving Americans into a constant exercise of critical thinking. | ||
unidentified
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It's Monday, May 19th, in the year of our Lord, 2025. | |
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
I think it's time to blow this thing. | ||
Get everybody in the stuff together. | ||
unidentified
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Okay, three. | |
I'm Harrison Smith, your host, coming to you live this Monday morning. | ||
Hope everybody's doing well. | ||
Hope everybody had a good weekend. | ||
It's been an interesting one in terms of the news. | ||
We've had some major disasters, major catastrophes caught on video. | ||
A leftist terrorist attack and Joe Biden being revealed. | ||
It's now been revealed that Joe Biden not only was completely incapacitated for pretty much the entirety of his presidency, but that he's got butt cancer as well. | ||
Just tragic stuff. | ||
Tragic stuff indeed. | ||
Now, we'll get into all of this and talk about, obviously, the release of this diagnosis was strategic. | ||
Sort of a weird way. | ||
In sort of a bizarre timing as they release this cancer diagnosis, just days before a new book is set to be released, exposing the cover-up of his mental decline. | ||
As if this is a good thing to be distracted by, I don't understand what the strategy is here. | ||
But we'll get into it. | ||
We'll discuss it all. | ||
We'll show you reactions to this cancer diagnosis. | ||
Across the board, we might not be so understanding for old Joe Biden. | ||
Typically, we leave the celebration of tragedy to the left. | ||
I actually don't like seeing even my political enemies diagnosed with something. | ||
As tragic as this, metastasis to the bone, basically a death sentence. | ||
But I also want to make abundantly clear, this guy is completely evil in getting exactly what he deserves. | ||
So I want to go over that as well. | ||
I want to sort of explain the metaphysical reality of A person living a life so just utterly devoid of goodwill and sincerity and truthfulness appropriately ends in just absolute disgrace and misery and pain. | ||
And he deserves it. | ||
He deserves every little bit of it. | ||
So we'll get into it. | ||
I just want to remind you. | ||
Joe Biden is not your grandfather. | ||
I have a feeling there's a lot of people out there from their limited knowledge of politics in general sort of have this conception of Joe Biden as this doddering old man. | ||
And they think of him almost just like a grandfather. | ||
Sure, maybe he's not the sharpest tool in the shed, but he spent his whole life fighting for the people of America. | ||
He deserves respect, if nothing else. | ||
And it's just like, no, he doesn't, though. | ||
No, he is a crass swindler. | ||
He is a devious tyrant. | ||
It's okay to recognize these people for what they are and not be fooled by their gee aw shucks act they put on in front of the cameras. | ||
This guy is a... | ||
Well, a vicious and despicable human, so it's okay to not wish the best for him, okay? | ||
Which just doesn't make you a bad person. | ||
Just make me a bad person. | ||
Just makes us able to recognize the wages of sin or death, and this guy has got a big old bill come and due. | ||
So we'll get into that, and we'll tell you all about it and show you all the responses from all the different sides. | ||
We also have prison escapes and Mexican ships running into bridges and leftist bombing fertility clinics of all places. | ||
As if to really highlight what underlies their despicable ideology. | ||
We'll get into all of it, your phone calls, and we'll be joined by Ian Carroll in the third hour to discuss the scam of private equity that is systematically and very deliberately Closing down the most profitable and successful retail firms in America. | ||
Something that's going completely unaddressed by anybody in power, which is how these things typically go. | ||
And I think it's up to us to cause the awareness of this to explode and, in that way, start to fight back against it. | ||
Because again, this is the way it works. | ||
I mean, all of Wall Street is basically engaged in a big game where they try to stay just one step ahead of the regulations. | ||
Basically, they invent some novel new concept or form of financial chicanery. | ||
And they do it as much as possible and as hard as possible until the regulators figure out what's going on and actually make rules to stop it. | ||
But it's always about just staying one step ahead of the laws, one step ahead of the regulations, doing things that aren't technically illegal yet, doing as much as possible. | ||
And then, you know, finally they get caught and the scheme stops, but nobody pays for it. | ||
Nobody gets in trouble because, again, these are all novel financial inventions that aren't technically illegal yet. | ||
Private equity is sort of on the forefront of that. | ||
And what they're doing has to be illegal. | ||
Maybe not technically, but morally it's a crime. | ||
And I guess regulations haven't caught up to this and won't catch up to it until there's a big enough outcry about what's going on. | ||
So we plan to make that cry and encourage people to try desperately to put a stop to what's happening, which is just, again, the systematic dismantling of our entire economy by a very few money managers. | ||
On Wall Street. | ||
We'll get into that. | ||
Stay tuned. | ||
Here it is. | ||
First, your daily dispatch. | ||
unidentified
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First, your daily dispatch. | |
Alright, here it is, folks. | ||
Your Daily Dispatch for Monday, the 19th of May, 2025. | ||
Biden diagnosed with aggressive form of prostate cancer. | ||
The disease included metastasis to the bone, according to a statement from his personal office. | ||
Former President Joe Biden has been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer with metastasis to the bone, according to a statement from his personal office Sunday. | ||
Doctors diagnosed Biden last week with a prostate nodule after he experienced increasing urinary symptoms. | ||
By Friday they diagnosed him with cancer. | ||
Biden's office said the cancer appears to be hormone-sensitive, which allows for effective management. | ||
A spokesperson said in a statement that the 82-year-old Biden and his family are reviewing treatment options with his physician. | ||
Biden's news seemed to, for a short time at least, break through Washington's current fierce divides. | ||
Among those quickly offering support was his immediate predecessor and successor in the White House, with President Trump saying... | ||
Quote, Melania and I are saddened to hear about Joe Biden's recent medical diagnosis. | ||
We extend our warmest and best wishes to Jill and the family. | ||
And we wish Joe a fast and successful recovery. | ||
Well, he's the President of the United States and such, you know, condescension is appropriate for him. | ||
I'm not. | ||
And so I'm going to tell you the truth about this. | ||
He's probably known about this cancer since possibly before he became president in 2020. | ||
We'll show you some expert analysis of the exact type of cancer he has and how it would have been pretty difficult to miss this developing for the last several years. | ||
Casting doubt on the claims by the White House doctor and others in as recently as February 2024 that Joe Biden was 100% fit. | ||
Not a thing wrong with him. | ||
Of course, we've known that is untrue for... | ||
The last six years at least. | ||
But nobody's paying attention to us, I guess. | ||
We somehow knew. | ||
People closest to him had no idea. | ||
Strange how that happens. | ||
Just the overall general illness. | ||
Not that we knew he had prostate cancer. | ||
We knew something was wrong, yeah. | ||
And apparently he let this slip back in 2022 where he said he had cancer. | ||
But I mean, it's, you know, with the medical things that that guy's had to deal with. | ||
Who knows what? | ||
He's probably got syphilis. | ||
I mean, he's got chunks of his brain that have removed. | ||
His eye exploded on stage in 2020. | ||
I mean, there's all sorts of things wrong with this thing. | ||
Whatever this is that apparently ruled our country for four years, if you believe that, for a single second. | ||
This man basically spent his entire life doing everything he possibly could. | ||
To gain power. | ||
And he achieved that goal. | ||
He became President of the United States, technically, theoretically. | ||
Legally, he was President of the United States. | ||
And now, he has seen just his entire family utterly disgraced. | ||
All of their dirty secrets aired out in public. | ||
He has lost any respect he once had, even from his own political team. | ||
He saw himself ousted, humiliated his chosen successor. | ||
Roundly defeated. | ||
And now he's going to die of ass cancer. | ||
And he deserves every bit of humiliation and misery that he's brought upon himself. | ||
So we'll revisit his life today and just look at some of the just abject horror that he subjected those closest to him and all of us really to over his time here on Earth. | ||
It's just been a A litany of disgraces. | ||
So we'll get into it. | ||
He's a bad guy. | ||
He's a very bad guy. | ||
And it's a shame he's made it this long. | ||
That's all I'll say. | ||
It's a shame for all of us that we've all had to be subjected to this for so long. | ||
And then there's talk about this being released strategically just ahead of the release of this book about his mental cover-up. | ||
The book itself is a Act of absurdity. | ||
It's the very people who covered up his mental decline writing a book about the cover-up of his mental decline. | ||
I mean, it's just ridiculous on the face of it. | ||
And then they released this cancer diagnosis, I guess, to distract from that. | ||
But how is that going to work when all you've done is added another layer, another angle, and another dimension to the cover-up? | ||
Clearly, you're covering up his physical infirmity as well as his mental incapacity. | ||
So what are you trying to prove here exactly? | ||
I don't understand the strategy behind this other than to distract from something that you're only making louder and more apparent. | ||
Again, is this just what happens when your entire political side is run by evil idiots? | ||
I guess so. | ||
I guess that's what we're dealing with. | ||
We'll move on. | ||
We'll return to that in just a little bit. | ||
Meanwhile... | ||
Two sailors killed after a Mexican Navy tall ship smashes into the Brooklyn Bridge on the 17th of May. | ||
The Mexican Navy training vessel something collided with a bridge in New York City, resulting in the deaths of two sailors and injuries to 19 others aboard. | ||
The incident happened when the ship, departing from a Manhattan pier, experienced mechanical failure that caused it to lose propulsion and unexpectedly move towards the bridge abutment. | ||
Videos show the ship's three masts scraping and snagging against the bridge, sending sailors into panic and some hanging from the rigging, waiting for rescue. | ||
New York Mayor Eric Adams confirmed 19 injured and two in critical condition, stating on social media that two crew members died as a result. | ||
And we have this from like a dozen different angles because this was such a big thing while it was happening and people all along the riverside captured video of this. | ||
It is a tragedy. | ||
It also seems to me to be indicative of the problems that the world is experiencing right now. | ||
Basically, in a word, trying to manage and maintain an extremely sophisticated vessel without the wherewithal, know-how, or ability to conduct it safely. | ||
Yeah, it's like civilization itself. | ||
Like a metaphysical symbol for what we're going through. | ||
On a whole, as a whole, and as a nation, as a world, it's very symbolic. | ||
So it's a tragedy. | ||
We don't want to make fun of it, but at the same time, what are they doing? | ||
What's going on here? | ||
What is this? | ||
And from certain angles, it looks like hitting the bridge is actually the best possible thing that could have happened because it was charging headlong towards a dock occupied by hundreds of people. | ||
So good thing it hit the bridge, I guess. | ||
Again, we'll talk more about that a little bit later today. | ||
Meanwhile, bomb blast near California Fertility Clinic kills one in suspected terrorist attack. | ||
Just 4.11 a.m. on Sunday, a vehicle detonated near a fertility clinic operated by American Reproductive Centers in Palm Springs, California. | ||
Authorities acted quickly following the explosion since the clinic was not operating at the time, and the FBI identified the blast as a deliberate act of terrorism. | ||
The explosion damaged the single-story clinic building, blew debris across a five-lane street, shattered windows blocks away, and ignited a car in the parking lot. | ||
Officials reported one fatality believed to be the suspect for injuries with unknown severity and an FBI investigators are examining if the event was live streamed. | ||
The incident created a large crime scene across multiple blocks, prompted coordinated emergency responses and emphasized ongoing investigations into domestic or international terrorism. | ||
Of course, the problem with that is that for the last several years, possibly several decades, the primary concern of the domestic terror investigators at the FBI and elsewhere in the federal government has been hyper-focused. | ||
On white supremacy, which really hasn't conducted any terrorist attacks of note or that you can even really point to. | ||
Well, entire months have gone by where leftists have attacked fertility clinics and pro-life places and RNC headquarters and just continue to run amok and commit heinous crimes for... | ||
political purposes. | ||
And yet you don't hear a lot about the leftist terror networks anywhere except for places like Infowars. | ||
And sometimes Fox News might dip their toe in it. | ||
But it is the much, much bigger and more concerning source of terrorism in the United States. | ||
Again, we'll get back into that. | ||
But just, you know. | ||
I hope people are understanding, like when you're bombing a reproductive clinic, it sends a pretty clear message about What the purpose of your movement is, what your underlying ideology is. | ||
Even if you don't agree with the methods, you could at least maybe understand the impetus behind attacking a place or protesting an abortion clinic because you see it as a mill of death. | ||
People actually going in there and killing babies. | ||
A reproductive center. | ||
Is only good. | ||
I mean, how could you possibly construe what's happening at a reproductive center as anything other than a positive? | ||
People being helped to create life and have children. | ||
Why do these people hate it so much? | ||
What is wrong with them? | ||
What is their real purpose and goals in this? | ||
What could drive somebody to be so passionate about something like this? | ||
I mean, the man killed himself. | ||
The van was a suicide bomber attacking a reproductive clinic. | ||
What to drive somebody to those lengths? | ||
And what does it say about where we are as a people? | ||
Meanwhile, Telegram founder says French intelligence asked him to censor Romanian conservatives. | ||
Ahead of the election, the founder of internet messaging app Telegram has accused the French intelligence service of asking him to censor Romanian conservatives ahead of the country's crucial election. | ||
Russian-born Pavel Durov is currently being held in France at the Hotel de Crillon. | ||
While he's being investigated for accusations of involvement in organized crime using his messaging app, Durov claimed it was during his stay at the hotel that he was approached by Nicholas Lerner, who runs the DGSE, Foreign Intelligence Agency, with a request. | ||
This spring at Salon de... | ||
Something at the hotel something. | ||
Nicholas Lerner, head of the French intelligence, asked me to ban conservative voices in Romania ahead of the election. | ||
I refused, Durov wrote on X on Sunday night ahead of the election results being announced. | ||
We did not block protesters in Russia, Belarus, or Iran. | ||
We won't start doing it in Europe. | ||
On Sunday night, it was announced that the centrist mayor of Bucharest... | ||
Nucresor Dan had won Romania's presidential election in a shock upset, beating favorite George Simeon. | ||
Simeon ran on an anti-globalist nationalist platform that pledged to follow the example of President Trump. | ||
France, of course, denies the allegation, but it did confirm it met with Durov to firmly remind him of his company's responsibilities and his own personally in preventing terrorist and child pornography threats. | ||
And I'm sure that's what it was about. | ||
And finally, we have this reward increased for capture of escaped New Orleans inmates as seven remain on the lam. | ||
The FBI increased the reward for information leading to the capture of seven inmates escaped from New Orleans Justice Center in New Orleans. | ||
to $10,000 per inmate. | ||
Ten inmates escaped the jail on Friday by breaking through a hole behind a toilet with three already recaptured as of Sunday. | ||
The escaped inmates faced charges including second-degree murder and were considered armed and dangerous by the authorities. | ||
And we can show you all about that as well. | ||
Basically, they just broke a hole out of the wall behind the toilet and escaped. | ||
Of course, they could have just... | ||
They could have probably just waited for their hearing, in which case they probably would have been let out anyway, because that's the way we treat criminals in the United States these days. | ||
So, will they be recaptured? | ||
Who knows. | ||
Will they go on to commit more crimes? | ||
Probably, that's generally what happens. | ||
Will our justice system be changed in any way to prevent the continual re-release of murderers and rapists and criminals? | ||
Yeah, probably not. | ||
Probably not. | ||
They even had time to scrawl a message on the wall to the police saying this was too easy, lol. | ||
Because they're mocking us. | ||
They're mocking us. | ||
We also have some clips of some pretty interesting interviews carried out over the weekend. | ||
Let's go to clip number 16 here. | ||
Trump has finished his Mideast jaunt where he was treated. | ||
Like a king in just about every country he visited, here's a video he made to remember his trip to the Middle East. | ||
Let's go to clip 16 now. | ||
It's a true privilege to visit your country, special country, and gather as friends. | ||
unidentified
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I'm honored to be the first American president ever to officially visit. | |
To thee, Amir. | ||
To the royal family and to this entire nation, congratulations on a spectacular job. | ||
As president, I'm proud that our growing friendship is blossomed into a full-fledged economic and security partnership. | ||
We're setting records on this trip for bringing a lot of investment back into it. | ||
The United States of America will be well over $10 trillion. | ||
I want to thank Your Highness for helping with that number. | ||
You know you can count on us and you know that it's going to be a great investment for you. | ||
So tonight, let us give thanks for the blessings of this friendship. | ||
We have a great friendship. | ||
I want to wish peace to the Amir and to all. | ||
There you go, a little video out of the White House, again, just showing the incredible feats Trump was able to carry off during his trip to the Middle East. | ||
That, of course, still a very dangerous zone for the We're going to talk about all of that and more when we get back on the other side. | ||
Again, we're going to take your calls today and be joined by Ian Carroll in the third hour to talk about private equity, dismantling the United States and what we can do to fight back against it, raise awareness about it, and hopefully... | ||
Stop them with everything we've got. | ||
I want to remind you to go to TheAlexJonesStore.com to support everything that we do here. | ||
TheAlexJonesStore.com slash Harrison if you want to let them know who sent you. | ||
We'll be back from the other side with more of today's top news. | ||
Stay with us folks. | ||
unidentified
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Welcome back ladies and gentlemen this is the American Journal. | |
Let's talk about Joe Biden shall we? | ||
Owen Schroer. | ||
Put it pretty well on X, I think. | ||
Calling this whole story probably the biggest political scandal of our lives. | ||
I thought I had his tweet here, but here it is. | ||
Owen Schroer says, Yeah, I think that's true. | ||
I think that is an accurate reading of the situation. | ||
And again, it's just kind of odd having to report on something that We more or less have known the entire time, not specifically about the prostate cancer that he's announced, but about the fact that he's just not well in general. | ||
Just overall, a deeply unwell individual, mentally, spiritually, physically. | ||
This news does seem to have been released strategically and oddly right before this long-awaited book. | ||
And it's funny, I mean, how many books are published every single day politically? | ||
I mean, every political pundit out there, every politician, every mainstream media figurehead, they all write books. | ||
They'll publish them, and 99.9% of them go completely unheralded by the vast majority of the population. | ||
This book, however, has been talked about continuously. | ||
We've talked about it several times. | ||
In part because of how absurd the entire premise is that Jake Tapper, I think it's Jake Tapper's book, right? | ||
Jake Tapper is writing a book about the cover-up of Biden's mental decline as if Jake Tapper himself and his media cohorts weren't the primary drivers of the fiction. | ||
Somehow, and I don't have to tell this, people have watched. | ||
American Journal for a long time. | ||
If you're new here, just know that during Biden's presidency, we started practically every show, like at least 50% of the shows started with us just showing a clip of Joe Biden being completely incapable of stringing together sentences, saying three-syllable words, walking in a straight line. | ||
I mean, it was bad. | ||
It was really bad for the entirety of his presidency. | ||
Somehow we noticed. | ||
Somehow. | ||
They didn't. | ||
I mean, this is absurd on the face of it. | ||
Then they come out with this cancer diagnosis, and a lot of experts in the field are looking at this sideways and saying, well, wait a second. | ||
If this cancer diagnosis is accurate, if this cancer in particular is this far advanced, there's absolutely no way that they didn't know about this. | ||
I mean, they had to have known about it for years, and it's got a lot of people... | ||
Asking, what were the real intentions here? | ||
Were they actually trying to... | ||
Did they actually intend to cover up his incapacity for the entirety of the race? | ||
Hope it got him over the finish line or at least allowed them to rig it somehow. | ||
Got him into office so he could immediately resign and hand the reins over to Kamala Harris. | ||
Was that the intention from the beginning? | ||
Yeah, Jake Tapper, Alex Thompson, Original Sin. | ||
I guess this book releases today or tomorrow or something. | ||
President Biden's decline, its cover-up, and his disastrous choice to run again. | ||
Again, how did you not see this? | ||
I mean, you were the one covering it up, and we played the clip before of him talking to one of Trump's family members. | ||
I can't remember who it was at this point, but asking, you know, and she's saying, well, you know, Biden looks like he's... | ||
Not mentally all there. | ||
It's just like, how dare you? | ||
You're not a medical doctor. | ||
The medical doctors have told us he's fine. | ||
And it's like, all right, well, then that's a big issue. | ||
It's a really big issue here. | ||
Again, Joe Biden has been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer with metastasis to the bone, according to a statement from his personal office Sunday. | ||
They diagnosed Biden last week with a prostate nodule after he experienced increased urinary symptoms. | ||
By Friday, they diagnosed him with cancer. | ||
And how do you not know this? | ||
How is this not apparent? | ||
And people are even pointing to a speech that Joe Biden gave in which he seemingly admitted that he had cancer all the way back in 2022, causing people to ask, okay, did he know about this then? | ||
Did they all know about this long before this? | ||
Was this really just a gaffe? | ||
Or did he admit to having cancer? | ||
And of course, people brought up this clip because at the time, people heard him and said, Gee, sure sounds like Joe Biden just admitted he has cancer. | ||
What's the deal with that? | ||
Only to be, you know, cursed out and criticized by the mainstream media for daring to interpret these words in the way that they were spoken. | ||
Let's go to clip number five here. | ||
This is Joe Biden back in 2022, seemingly admitting that he had cancer. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
Four-lane highway that was accessible, my mother drove us rather than us be able to walk. | ||
And guess what? | ||
The first frost, you know what was happening? | ||
It had to put on their windshield wipers to get literally the oil slick off the window. | ||
That's why I and so damn many other people I grew up have cancer. | ||
And why can't for the longest time Delaware had the highest cancer rate in the nation. | ||
Thank you. | ||
That's interesting. | ||
It's also a great reminder of What Joe Biden was like as president. | ||
Starting off that clip with just like, what the hell is he talking about? | ||
We had to walk because we couldn't drive. | ||
We were going to the beach. | ||
And my mother, she was going to drive. | ||
We had to turn the windshield wipers on. | ||
Get the oil slick on. | ||
It's just like, people voted for him. | ||
People voted for him. | ||
And they wanted to vote for him again. | ||
And they went out of their way, and in fact may have committed crimes to cover up his mental incapacity. | ||
Why would they? | ||
Why would they keep such an incompetent, incapable, gaffe-prone, embarrassment machine in office? | ||
If for no other reason than that made him easy to manipulate, control. | ||
Again, we have so many examples of... | ||
Not just Joe Biden being mentally incompetent, but that mental incompetence leading to his office making decisions of which he was not aware and did not agree. | ||
So now this has sort of brought up everything he did as president under really intense scrutiny. | ||
There's people asking, is any of it valid? | ||
I mean, do we even need to accept... | ||
Somebody like Kentonji Brown Jackson on the Supreme Court. | ||
Was Joe Biden actually the one who nominated her? | ||
That is the way it's supposed to go. | ||
That's the function of our system. | ||
But if he's completely out to lunch and decisions are being made by unelected bureaucrats, do they even count anymore? | ||
If every single one of the orders signed under his administration... | ||
We're signed by Autopin. | ||
Do any of them have any validity whatsoever? | ||
I really don't think so. | ||
And again, not even to celebrate. | ||
I mean, to me, if this cancer takes him out, he will have avoided the justice that he deserves. | ||
Maybe this just puts a light to fire under the right wing of the GOP. | ||
We got to punish these criminals now before they escape. | ||
By dying. | ||
That's just me. | ||
I just want to see these people actually tried and convicted for their criminality, not escaping by cancer. | ||
This guy's not your grandpappy, right? | ||
I know that he puts on this Joe from Scranton act when he's in front of the camera. | ||
I just want to remind good people out there, this guy is a Conniving, scheming criminal. | ||
He didn't do anything for America. | ||
He never did anything for America. | ||
He was in office in one form or another for like 75 years. | ||
And he never achieved anything but to enrich himself and engage his family in a variety of corrupt activities. | ||
It's like... | ||
Everything this guy is getting, he deserves. | ||
And it should be an object lesson to everybody out there, to kids out there. | ||
It's like, look, you can scheme to get ahead. | ||
You can be divisive and vicious. | ||
You can be a jackass your whole life. | ||
And it might work out for a little while. | ||
Hell, you might become president of the United States by behaving in that way. | ||
But at the end of it all, you're going to be a despised footnote in history. | ||
You're going to be a figure that people look back at with derision and mockery, not sympathy. | ||
Nobody is going to remember Joe Biden as a politician. | ||
They're going to remember him as a crime lord. | ||
His accomplishments as a politician. | ||
They're going to remember the pictures of his son cracked out naked with a couple of sex-trafficked foreign girls. | ||
They're going to remember the Afghan withdrawal in which Joe Biden's lack of concern for the Americans under his authority got them all killed. | ||
13 of them anyway. | ||
unidentified
|
13 of them. | |
It's just, it's almost sad that the media isn't treating this as they should. | ||
Again, if for no other reason than to let other people with the Joe Biden-like ambitions know, it's just not worth it at the end of the day. | ||
Your legacy will be dismantled. | ||
Your darkest secrets will come to light. | ||
The truth about your soul will be laid bare for everybody to see. | ||
And everybody will know what a despicable conniving jackass you truly are. | ||
And then you'll die of ass cancer and nobody will care. | ||
And all of the ill-gotten gains that you have Betrayed and sacrificed your family for will amount to nothing because everybody will see who you truly are. | ||
So good riddance, Joe Biden. | ||
You absolute tool. | ||
At 82, Biden and his family are discussing treatment plans with doctors and medical experts. | ||
And they indicate the cancer responds to hormone therapy, which facilitates control of the disease. | ||
In a social media post, Biden wrote, cancer touches us all. | ||
And he and Jill Biden expressed that, quote, we are strongest in broken places, thanking supporters for their encouragement. | ||
While the cancer's aggressiveness and spread complicate treatment, its hormone sensitivity offers hope for control. | ||
And public responses of underscored support admit ongoing treatment deliberations. | ||
He's got my best wishes as well. | ||
I hope you get well soon, Biden. | ||
Because acting like a doddering old coot isn't going to get you out of the next round of criminal investigations focused on you like it did the first. | ||
And of course this is again a very long known reality for people that have been paying attention. | ||
Let's go down to clip number 15. Treasonous Barack and Hillary Clinton were in fact running the White House under Joe Biden. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
What's your title? | |
Special advisor. | ||
I work for the chief of staff. | ||
Oh, you report to the chief of staff. | ||
So author is the chief of staff to Guzman. | ||
Yeah, Isabella Guzman. | ||
So she's basically a spokesperson for Biden. | ||
Yeah. | ||
She's indirectly campaigning for Biden. | ||
Yes, yeah. | ||
Administrator Guzman said basically are going to these critical battleground states to basically campaign for President Biden. | ||
Anytime we go, we try to visit with a member of Congress if they're a Democrat. | ||
unidentified
|
The White House was like, yes, go. | |
Don't invite the other senator because he's a Republican. | ||
Don't invite the two members of Congress because they're Republicans. | ||
There's a guy named Jeff Sainz. | ||
By getting Jeff Sainz off, you're getting the president to sign off. | ||
People call him the second most powerful person in Washington. | ||
unidentified
|
Most times it's like, hey, whatever the size this guy says is what the president says. | |
Who would you say is the most powerful person at the White House? | ||
Jeff. | ||
Jeff is the most powerful person at the White House. | ||
Other than the president, no. | ||
There's probably like five or six people that work for the We've worked with him for 30 years. | ||
One of them is Ron Clay. | ||
Ron worked for Biden when he's like a senator. | ||
There's a guy named Steve Roche. | ||
He's like a senior advisor at the White House. | ||
Anita Dunn. | ||
Yeah, she's a senior advisor at the White House. | ||
And Gene Sperling. | ||
Gene Sperling. | ||
He's an economics guy. | ||
Oh, his sister. | ||
Biden's sister. | ||
She like runs the Biden Foundation. | ||
They're the people that run his different departments. | ||
If they put it on his desk, I'm like, hey, we think he's going to do this. | ||
So I feel like She has people that are, like, super close to her that are still, um, like, senior people in the White House. | ||
So who is she talking to in the White House? | ||
I hope that Hillary is still involved behind the scene. | ||
No, she is. | ||
This is O 'Keefe Media Group Investigates the Swamp Part 7 Small Business Administration. | ||
Not a week goes by without a news headline about potential medical supply shortages, threats to our infrastructure, or power grid. | ||
unidentified
|
And you remember what they pulled during the last pandemic. | |
So that was just a little highlight reel ahead of that long 18-minute full video, which you can find from O 'Keefe Media Group. | ||
That was the Small Business Administration head. | ||
Infowars, Biden Deputy Chief of Staff confesses in undercover video that Biden was near-vegetable over the last four years and was never the president. | ||
He goes on to name who the real president was, of course, referencing Barack Obama's influence, all of these various aides that no one's ever heard of, being the most powerful people in Washington. | ||
Well, if you get the okay from him, it's like getting the okay from Biden. | ||
Okay, well, why is that? | ||
Because Biden's not actually running anything. | ||
It's being run by the bureaucracy. | ||
Now, the really sort of concerning thing about this for me is that not only did we know that this was the case early on, the Democrats knew as well. | ||
I don't know if anybody else had conversations like this, but I had conversations with not even leftists, people who called themselves conservative. | ||
They voted for a Republican their whole lives until Donald Trump came along. | ||
They just don't like Donald Trump, but they're still diehard conservatives. | ||
I was having a conversation with this lady, and I was like, yeah, but Joe Biden is mentally incompetent. | ||
He can't string a sentence together. | ||
He can hardly pronounce words that are more than two syllables. | ||
And she totally acknowledged that and was like, yeah, that's fine. | ||
If Joe Biden had a stroke and was in a coma, I'd still vote for him. | ||
Just the guy. | ||
It's his team that's around him. | ||
So, you know, it'd be one thing if, you know, this was revealed that Joe Biden, chief executive, was in fact being handled by a clandestine array of faceless bureaucrats. | ||
It would be one thing if that was unknown. | ||
And revealed and people were outraged and felt betrayed by that. | ||
But that's not the case. | ||
They knew exactly what they were voting for. | ||
They knew that that was the case and they're okay with that. | ||
They actually prefer that. | ||
They find some, to me, perverse comfort in the idea that the affairs of the state are being managed by career bureaucrats who never have to answer to the voters for their decisions. | ||
I can't fathom that mindset. | ||
I don't understand how they've been indoctrinated into accepting that form of government. | ||
But this is not a surprise to a lot of Democrats. | ||
They pretend, at least they pretended, that Joe Biden was competent and capable, but they knew he wasn't. | ||
It's just like all of them. | ||
Like Jake Tapper's writing this book, he knew the whole time. | ||
They all knew the whole time, how could they not? | ||
They're in favor of it. | ||
They think it's fine. | ||
Joe Biden is a complete retard, can't wipe his own butt, let alone run the country. | ||
That's fine because he's surrounded by a bunch of political insiders that are going to handle things for us. | ||
And we don't ever have to know the reasoning for their decisions. | ||
They never have to explain what they're doing or answer for their failures. | ||
They never get the blame. | ||
But they take all the credit. | ||
And people are fine with that. | ||
And they're okay with that. | ||
And it's been going on for a while. | ||
And we shouldn't have to remind you about West Exec. | ||
I mean, think about this. | ||
You've got somebody like Jen Psaki, right? | ||
Jen Psaki was in the Obama White House. | ||
She's one of the people in that famous picture when all of the Obama... | ||
Operatives in the White House had to welcome Trump, and they're all frowning with their arms crossed. | ||
There she is, front and center, right? | ||
So Jen Psaki there, front and center at the Obama White House, along with some sort of character from Planet of the Apes. | ||
I don't know how she got in. | ||
This must be Photoshopped or something. | ||
But anyway, Jen Psaki's there right in the middle. | ||
Obama is out of the White House. | ||
Trump comes in. | ||
Psaki... | ||
Joins Anthony Blinken and others in founding WestExec in a building literally directly across the street from the White House. | ||
For those four years, they are secretly managing affairs from just outside the White House, but still obviously with massive influence in the bureaucracies of the executive branch. | ||
And then as soon as Biden is placed in office through a rigged election, Jen Psaki's back in the White House. | ||
Managing things once again. | ||
Jen Psaki is just one of a variety of these people who, again, never been elected in anything, never been voted for by anybody, never had to actually justify their position making decisions on behalf of America. | ||
And yet these are the people pulling the strings. | ||
These are the people actually making decisions. | ||
These are the people actually coordinating functions and actions within the... | ||
Federal government. | ||
And it's no wonder that our country is teetering on the brink. | ||
Of course, President Trump has released a statement on Biden's cancer diagnosis. | ||
Saying that they're saddened to hear about Joe Biden's recent diagnosis. | ||
We extend our warmest wishes. | ||
To Jill and the family, we wish Joe a fast and speedy recovery. | ||
But many medical professionals do not believe that Joe Biden was diagnosed in just the past week. | ||
Dr. Stephen Quay on X saying prostate cancer is the easiest cancer to diagnose when it first starts and to watch it progress to bone metastases. | ||
The PSA blood test shows the rate of cancer cell growth for even the most aggressive form. | ||
It's a five to seven year journey without treatment. | ||
Before it becomes that widespread. | ||
Again, the question is, how long have they known about this prostate cancer? | ||
And were they hiding it for political purposes? | ||
It says, meaning it would be malpractice for this patient to show up in the first diagnosis with metastatic disease in May 2025. | ||
It's highly likely he was carrying a diagnosis of prostate cancer throughout his White House tenure, and the American people were uninformed. | ||
And really, if nothing else, it just shows you how just thoroughly corrupt the entire system is. | ||
What else would they be willing to cover up and hide and conceal, even if it would have absolutely massive and dangerous effects for the safety of the American people or our continuing well-being? | ||
How are you going to make decisions for the best of America? | ||
For the greater good, if you're so clearly willing to, you know, commit to these insane and obvious lies. | ||
From Infowars.com, inconceivable Biden cancer diagnosis baffles experts. | ||
Medical experts are saying former President Joe Biden's cancer diagnosis is inconceivable. | ||
Quote, it's highly likely he was carrying a diagnosis of prostate cancer throughout his White House tenure. | ||
The American people were misinformed, or not informed, uninformed. | ||
Biden's diagnosis of aggressive prostate cancer was revealed to the world on Sunday. | ||
Associated Press reported Biden82 was diagnosed on Friday following urinary tract symptoms and the cancer had spread to his bone, according to a statement from the ex-president's office. | ||
On a scale used to measure prostate cancer called the Gleason scale, Biden's rates 9 out of 10, meaning it's one of the most aggressive forms, according to the office's statement. | ||
While this represents a more aggressive form of the disease, the cancer appears to be hormone-sensitive, allowing for effective management. | ||
But again, people are noting that the presence of prostate-specific antigen, PSA, would have shown Biden had cancer for some time before this diagnosis. | ||
In early 2024, when Biden was the presumptive Democratic nominee for the presidency, he was deemed fit to serve by physician Dr. Kevin O 'Connor after a routine evaluation at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. | ||
Dr. Foreman noted that Biden must have had a PSA test numerous times before and described the late-stake diagnosis as odd. | ||
unidentified
|
Everything about Biden's presidency was odd. | |
It was an odd time in America to be ruled by faceless bureaucrats. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
Second hour is on. | ||
I want to go down to a video. | ||
I'm not sure what this user's name is. | ||
I'm going to try to find it and credit him. | ||
This is a video I think we can all resonate with. | ||
Clip number 10, MAGA voters are fed up with the GOP. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
Ladies and gentlemen, amongst Republicans, there is an absolute storm brewing because I'll tell you what, right now, people are not happy. | |
You see, President Trump has been back in the White House now for precisely 115 days, and while he's been busy working tirelessly to fix our country, The Republican-controlled Congress has pretty much done absolutely nothing. | ||
Seriously, out of the last 115 days, Congress has only been in session for 52 days, less than half of President Trump's presidency, and it's the congressional Republicans who are making the schedule, specifically House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune. | ||
But hey, if you don't think that's a big deal, take a look at this. | ||
In the last 115 days, the Republican-controlled House and Senate have sent fewer bills to President Trump, And so this is the Republican Congress that President Trump has to work with, and this is the Republican Congress that President Trump has to rely on in order to bring permanence to his America First agenda. | ||
In fact, the situation is actually even worse than the Congressional Republicans just being in a state of permanent vacation. | ||
You see... | ||
Several of them are actually actively undermining what President Trump is trying to accomplish. | ||
And so we're going to break all of that down here in just a moment. | ||
But before we do, I want to say real quick that if you guys enjoy the daily news updates, please consider subscribing to the channel because it really does help a lot. | ||
But okay, check this out. | ||
So far, the Department of Government Efficiency has cut over $170 billion worth of waste and fraud out of our federal budget. | ||
And while not all of those cuts have to be approved by Congress, some of them do. | ||
And so that's why President Trump wanted to include $9 billion worth of these doge cuts in the upcoming budget reconciliation bill, or as he likes to call it, the one big beautiful bill. | ||
Now, getting those budget cuts passed through the House doesn't seem to be an issue, but in the Senate, multiple Republicans are actually openly defying President Trump's mandate, saying that they won't vote for these budget cuts. | ||
Normally, to pass a bill through the Senate, you'd need a total of 60 votes, pretty much requiring bipartisan support. | ||
But due to the nature of this budget reconciliation bill, the Republicans only need 50 votes total, which means that this should be one of the easiest slam dunks in congressional history, considering that right now we currently have 53 Republican senators. | ||
However, because of some of the rhinos involved, Republicans in name only, it's looking like this $9 billion worth of doge cuts aren't going to get included in the bill. | ||
Now, to get a little bit more specific here, this $9 billion worth of doge cuts primarily relates to funding for USAID, NPR, and PBS. | ||
So it's hard to imagine that any sane Republican would oppose these things getting cut from the federal budget, but hey, here we are. | ||
We've got Republican senators like Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, and Mitch McConnell who are just refusing to vote for these doge cuts altogether, and then there's a couple others who are currently undecided, teetering on the fence. | ||
Really, this is all just yet another example of just... | ||
Again, I don't understand how Republicans in office are so utterly disconnected from Republicans on the ground. | ||
It seems like everybody, every layperson, average citizen I talk to on the Republican side, completely comprehends what a life or death scenario we find ourselves in, knowing that if we don't... | ||
Make just massive changes to the way things are run. | ||
The left is going to continue on their just absolutely insane drive to crush all dissent, censor anybody speaking against them, and probably make free speech itself a thing of the past. | ||
Polkens on the ground worked their butts off to get these people into office. | ||
And the people in office just act like they have just no conception of what's happening in the world. | ||
I don't understand it. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't get how they don't get it. | |
Like, do something, or luck's going to put you up against a wall if they win the next round. | ||
What more do we have to say? | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
We, like I said, have just so much news to get to in terms of the COVID vaccine. | ||
Health in general. | ||
More and more information coming out about just how poison our environment is and, you know, what's behind it. | ||
We really just have a lot of news, but I got a lot of videos to get to as well. | ||
I want to get to some of those right now. | ||
And I think we'll start with clip number two here. | ||
It's just a general sort of setting of the table. | ||
Laying out how it is, what the mental levers being pulled are. | ||
In other words, you look around America or Western Europe, and for anybody informed and paying attention, it's baffling and outrageous the way that our nations have been Just systematically dismantled over the last just couple of years, really. | ||
A couple of decades, if you want to expand it out a little bit. | ||
It has been going on for a while, but obviously it's gotten a lot more intense very recently. | ||
And again, for those of us paying attention, you look at this and you just go, how have people allowed this to happen? | ||
How have they just sat back and been so willing to let Their countries, their ways of life, their families just be attacked relentlessly and they don't even defend themselves. | ||
I mean, it just makes no sense. | ||
And it's practically every major topic of concern is just on the face of it beyond absurd. | ||
You can isolate just the climate change initiatives. | ||
Like, nothing they're doing makes even the slightest amount of sense. | ||
Even if everything that they say is true, their reactions are absurd and completely ineffective and nonsensical. | ||
And they're all predicated on lies in the first place. | ||
So it's like, okay, you can take that and just look at it and go, what the hell's going on here? | ||
This is complete nonsense. | ||
Then you can look at the, of course, immigration issue. | ||
Like, how is this a thing? | ||
You know, rulers of Ireland are placing literal, like, military encampments of Africans throughout the entire country. | ||
And they only get discovered when, like, some dude with a drone flies up and finds out that there are just rows and rows of barracks being built on some quiet corner of some, you know, rural county somewhere. | ||
And just time and time again, no matter what issue you're talking about, you look at it and you just go, how are people going along with this? | ||
How are they being tricked into this? | ||
How is it that their, even just like their basic survival instinct doesn't activate and drive them to resist this with everything they've got? | ||
And there's lots of very sophisticated psychological Maneuvers being pulled against the people of Europe, but this one video I'm about to show you, I think maybe does more to explain it than just about anything else. | ||
And you can take what you're about to see here and sort of extrapolate it out to not just the sports world, but video games and all sorts of other distractions from what is real. | ||
I don't even know what's happening in this video. | ||
I guess some team in the UK won something. | ||
And you see just tens of thousands of British people having this intense emotional reaction. | ||
And you just wonder, like, where is this reaction to their country being destroyed? | ||
To their friends and family being murdered by foreigners? | ||
Like, how is it? | ||
That the powers that be have so effectively redirected the energy of these people to something that just could not matter less. | ||
Go now to clip number two. | ||
unidentified
|
Best day of my life. | |
Best day of my f***ing life. | ||
It means everything. | ||
Everything. | ||
Everything. | ||
Deserved at long last. | ||
Hallelujah. | ||
I can die a happy man! | ||
unidentified
|
The winner is hugging and weeping. | |
We score! | ||
Grown men crying like babies. | ||
unidentified
|
Grown men crying like babies. | |
Hugging each other. | ||
Again, grown men just openly weeping. | ||
unidentified
|
This massive, massive soccer pitch. | |
This stadium filled. | ||
100,000 people. | ||
And you can just feel the amount of energy and emotion just spilling out. | ||
I mean, literally all of them are, like, literally openly weeping. | ||
What's happened? | ||
You know, somebody kicked a ball and a goal, I guess. | ||
I guess some dude, like, from Africa kicked a ball past the goaltender from Latin America. | ||
And so all of these... | ||
UK people are just shattered. | ||
They're just experiencing this emotional catharsis unlike anything they've ever experienced before. | ||
Meanwhile, their way of life is being destroyed. | ||
Their small towns are being invaded. | ||
Their wives and children are being raped. | ||
Couldn't summon an iota of concern for any of that. | ||
But when it comes to soccer ball, well, where all of their energy is directed. | ||
Again, is that not just pathetic? | ||
Is that not just insane? | ||
I have no idea what they're even celebrating. | ||
But it looks like they're celebrating the end to a war. | ||
I mean, it looks like this is VE Day and they're like weeping in relief. | ||
That their sons on the battlefield aren't going to be, you know, blown up by a bomb. | ||
I mean, what is this? | ||
They all look like, you know, respectable middle class people. | ||
And literally, they're all just hugging and weeping and crying, putting their head down. | ||
And it's just like, this is all over something that is just completely fake. | ||
Just a simulation of... | ||
Like, even if this was as real as it could possibly be, I mean, there's like an extra layer of absurdity in that, just like American football or, you know, any other, you know, major money-making sport, soccer in the UK is just purely a corporate exercise. | ||
Like, this team is probably owned by, you know, Qatari Airlines or something ridiculous. | ||
Probably nobody on the team is even from the area that they're representing. | ||
So you've got a bunch of grown men openly weeping over the fact that, again, some dude wearing their colors kicked the ball in the goal. | ||
I like sports. | ||
I'm a fan of sports. | ||
But when you have this level of emotionality wrapped up, When you're this dedicated and outraged and frustrated, there's something wrong. | ||
There's something seriously, seriously wrong with your priorities, your values. | ||
I mean, the guy in the beginning said, I can die happy now. | ||
I can die happy now that footballer number one has kicked ball into goal number two. | ||
I can die happy now. | ||
FA Cup final, Crystal Palace won Manchester City 0. E's goal, Henderson Heroics win first ever trophy. | ||
Well, there you go. | ||
So some team called Crystal Palace got a goal. | ||
Crystal Palace FC. | ||
When you Google their team name, fireworks shoot up on the screen. | ||
Amazing. | ||
Now I can feel it. | ||
I really can. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
I just, you know, and you just have to, again, I'm not breaking any new ground here. | ||
Like everybody gets the bread and circuses thing. | ||
But it's sort of come cliche. | ||
And you sort of forget. | ||
How real it is? | ||
That these are people whose nation is being stolen out from under them. | ||
Whose heritage is being deliberately dismantled. | ||
Right in front of their faces. | ||
They can't summon a single tear for that. | ||
They don't even care about it. | ||
They're like happy it's happening, if anything. | ||
I would tell them that their team lost. | ||
It's like the world is ending. | ||
It's just, what are we doing here? | ||
This is just pathetic. | ||
Disgusting. | ||
Where's Crystal Palace? | ||
Where do they represent? | ||
Let's look up, you know, what's going on in that particular county or city in England. | ||
You'll notice... | ||
I think I saw one non-white guy in this crowd. | ||
One of the migrant community. | ||
Selhurst, South England. | ||
Selhurst. | ||
I wonder how Selhurst is doing these days. | ||
Again, not to say that... | ||
You know, I wish there were more immigrants into this. | ||
It's like, yeah, one population is focused on reality and one population is distracted by literal games for children. | ||
That's where their energy goes. | ||
That's where their focus goes. | ||
That's where they feel comfortable letting out their emotion. | ||
And this has been obvious for a long time. | ||
I remember going to Europe 20 years ago or something. | ||
Wasn't quite that long, 15, 18 years ago. | ||
And seeing the way that, like, it's all throughout Europe, France, Germany, England. | ||
They have, you know, these soccer clubs where it's basically, you know, it's an outlet for testosterone. | ||
It's an outlet for aggressiveness. | ||
You've got all of these European men who do absolutely nothing to stand up for Their people, their nation, their history, their heritage, their way of life, their children. | ||
They're under concerted, deliberate attack constantly. | ||
They don't even know what's going on. | ||
If they did know, they wouldn't really care. | ||
But every weekend, they get together with their boys and they go get in these big brawls and massive fistfights where hooligans from either side come together, beat the crap out of each other. | ||
Over the football uniforms. | ||
Spend all of their energy. | ||
Feel satisfied. | ||
Change nothing. | ||
It's just, it is truly bizarre how well this has worked. | ||
Yeah, meanwhile, their children being butchered by random foreigners. | ||
Ask them about that and they'll be, ah, well, I don't know anything about that. | ||
Well, I mean, that's sad, but I don't really concern myself with that. | ||
And it's like, oh, but your soccer team kicked the ball in the goal. | ||
And they're just like, oh, my God. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
It's just pathetic. | ||
It really is sick and sickening. | ||
Again, this is like so cliche at this point. | ||
You know, people just sort of represent, well, bread and circuses. | ||
But like, yeah, it's very real. | ||
It's a very, very, very effective outlet for emotion, outlet for concern, outlet for the drive that is necessary to actually change things. | ||
It really is just sad. | ||
It really is just absolutely pathetic. | ||
And I really don't know what else I can add to that other than just say it is that. | ||
It is just utterly and outrageously pathetic. | ||
We'll go to clip number nine now. | ||
This is a video about, again, what it's like to just live in America these days as we watch. | ||
In real time, as all of the things that most of us take for granted are going away. | ||
Slowly but surely. | ||
And you can recognize this and work to counteract it. | ||
Or you can just believe the lie or the insinuation that's constantly pumped down that all of this is just inevitable and it's just up to you to conform yourself to it. | ||
Don't try to make a change. | ||
Don't ask questions about why this is happening. | ||
Preferably don't even notice it's happening. | ||
Just wallow in ignorance as your civilization just dissolves all around you. | ||
Here's a father who was at, I guess, a baseball game. | ||
Came back home to find his house had been broken into. | ||
Called 911. | ||
But this is L.A. So I think you'll understand what happens next. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, I just came home from my son's baseball game. | |
Tonight to this, we had a break-in in our house, and luckily everybody's safe, but things were stolen, including a safe with everything that my dad gave me after he passed away. | ||
Coins, valuables, some baseball cards, things like that. | ||
My wife lost some jewelry from her grandma and from my mom, who also passed away. | ||
This shit is unnerving, and it's not cool. | ||
And I'll tell you what else. | ||
I was on hold with 911 for 59 minutes. | ||
59 minutes. | ||
And luckily, it's just a home burglary. | ||
It wasn't somebody dying, choking that was shot or something. | ||
But what happens if it was a real-time emergency? | ||
Luckily, the police, when they did show up, came. | ||
They were very nice, but they mentioned how... | ||
How undermanned they are. | ||
And that's a problem. | ||
We'll get over this. | ||
It's going to get boarded up. | ||
My son's a little unnerved. | ||
My wife, I am. | ||
We're all unnerved. | ||
But this is a problem. | ||
This is a real problem. | ||
So I'm going to get into more depth on this, but goddamn. | ||
His house is broken into. | ||
He calls 911. | ||
And is on hold for 59 minutes. | ||
He's on hold for an hour before he's even able to tell 911 what's happened to him. | ||
I mean, how does he get to that point if it's not deliberate? | ||
How is 911 in LA so dysfunctional? | ||
You can't even talk to an operator for an hour? | ||
It might as well not exist. | ||
You might as well not have 911. | ||
But of course you know that if you defend yourself, if you're able to navigate the restrictions in California and actually have a gun of your own and actually defend yourself from people breaking into your house or robbing from you or something else. | ||
So he says he was on hold for two minutes with 911, not an hour. | ||
I want to make it clear they answered. | ||
He said he was on hold for 59 minutes. | ||
Here, scroll down. | ||
Let's see what the story is here. | ||
I imagine this is like Austin where you basically if someone's not actively trying to kill you, they just put you on hold. | ||
A few minutes can make a difference. | ||
L.A. In a Minute podcast host, Evan Levitt, clarified a scary situation that happened at his home and resulted in a long wait time for a police response to the story to not unfold the way he described in an Instagram post. | ||
He reported somebody broke into a Studio City home on Friday. | ||
When he called 911, he waited on the phone for nearly an hour. | ||
But on Monday, he updated his viewers to say the 911 dispatchers actually answered his call within two minutes. | ||
He explained there was a break-in in his home. | ||
The dispatcher asked if anybody was in immediate danger, and he said everybody in his home was safe. | ||
And that's when the call was transferred to Los Angeles to police department. | ||
That's when he was placed on a long hold. | ||
It was 58 minutes from that point, from the time they picked up, which, in retrospect, with that chaos, with the stress, is a reasonable time for a not imminently dangerous situation. | ||
Is it, though? | ||
Is it? | ||
You like how he's just, he's basically just accepted that, like, they're never going to find the person. | ||
And they don't even suggest that they are. | ||
He's like, the police were very nice. | ||
And yeah, I'm sure, you know, I'm sure the cops love getting calls like that. | ||
To go. | ||
I'm not going to get shot. | ||
You know, I don't have to go wrestle a homeless person. | ||
You know, with crack strength. | ||
I'll just go and, you know, we'll take pictures of the crime scene. | ||
We'll write it down. | ||
We'll file it away. | ||
And then our job is done here. | ||
Right? | ||
What do you think? | ||
They're dusting for fingerprints. | ||
They're canvassing the neighborhood. | ||
They're asking the neighbors, did you see anything suspicious? | ||
Maybe they did the bare minimum of that, but it's just understood at this point. | ||
They're not catching that guy. | ||
Because there is some truth to the fact that when you let your city get so out of control, when you let crime become so rampant, when you refuse to lock up criminals and actually pay people to not have jobs and... | ||
Just hang out addicted to drugs. | ||
Just supply. | ||
Your solution to alcoholism amongst the homeless is to give them bottles of gin. | ||
I mean, there's some truth to the fact that when you create so much crime, there are so many instances of imminent danger that have to take precedent. | ||
Then that break-in of yours just keeps getting pushed down the list. | ||
Just further and further down the list. | ||
Every couple of minutes, there's something else that takes priority. | ||
Yours gets pushed down. | ||
And it'll just never get solved, never get fixed. | ||
This again is completely deliberate. | ||
It's an outcome of not just the overall leftist pro-criminal mentality, but also of course the defunding of the police and all the associated systems in places like California. | ||
Now you know who is never going to make a video like this? | ||
Are the people at the higher income bracket than him. | ||
Now clearly he's living in Studio City. | ||
You can see from even just the little bit of the house that he shows. | ||
This guy's not living in the ghetto, right? | ||
He's living in a probably a pretty nice neighborhood. | ||
You should probably reasonably be able to assume that you can leave your house for an hour without having a brick thrown through your window and all of your prized possessions stolen from you. | ||
But obviously we're being Herded towards a civilization where just the assumption of safety is no longer applicable. | ||
You're not safe anymore. | ||
You're not going to be able to protect yourself anymore. | ||
The people who will be able to protect themselves are the millionaires and billionaires who will live in gated communities who will be able to pay for private security or pay for private investigators to go search this stuff out. | ||
This stuff, these things that we In America, which is used to having at our demand, we're just not going to have that anymore. | ||
It's just not going to be available to us regular people anymore. | ||
If you can pay for it, you'll be able to get it. | ||
But if not, you're going to be out of luck. | ||
So we're shifting from our collective... | ||
Contributions to government, you know, in turn, providing us with safe communities. | ||
No, they actually are being funneled directly to the criminals. | ||
And you're going to be left on your own. | ||
You know, house full of glass. | ||
We're going to try to get to these clips of Kash Patel in just a second. | ||
But I've got, weirdly, a lot of news about the COVID vaccine today. | ||
It's strange how sometimes this stuff all crops up all at once. | ||
There's also, before we get to the COVID stuff, there's some other general medical news that's pretty interesting. | ||
A new study found that living close to a golf course less than a mile more than doubles your risk of being diagnosed with Parkinson's disease even after adjusting for age and income. | ||
Researchers point to pesticide runoff in drinking water as a likely culprit. | ||
Proximity to golf courses and risk of Parkinson's disease. | ||
Just another quick reminder that we are being deluged continuously with a variety of poisons. | ||
Maybe it's climate change. | ||
Maybe it could be, I don't know, climate change, something like that. | ||
It's wild. | ||
Doubles your risk of being diagnosed with Parkinson's living a mile or less from a golf course. | ||
It's insane. | ||
Meanwhile, the U.S. has not seen a human bird flu case in three months. | ||
Experts are wondering why. | ||
Hmm, what happened about three months ago? | ||
What was it that occurred around the end of January? | ||
The Biden administration was ousted, and they stopped. | ||
Spreading this misinformation? | ||
The U.S. has not reported any new human H5N1 bird flu cases since early February 2025, raising questions among experts. | ||
This pause in human cases follows a known seasonal pattern and coincides with a drop in testing and surveillance after late 2024. | ||
Most infections since early 2024 occurred among dairy and poultry workers with mild symptoms, while over 120 domestic cats died of exposure to infected poultry. | ||
Experts like Gregory Gray and Michael Osterholm I think it's pretty safe to say we have defeated the bird flu scandemic before it even got its feet | ||
underneath it. | ||
I guess another positive of getting Donald Trump elected. | ||
They no longer are fear-mongering about bird flu and testing every cow in the country every day, desperate to get a PCR acknowledgement that bird flu exists. | ||
They were absolutely planning to run a second scandemic COVID-style You know, global lockdown. | ||
But I guess they've, you know, killed a billion chickens. | ||
So their job here is done. | ||
Or maybe they'll return to it. | ||
We don't know. | ||
But regardless, pretty interesting. | ||
Three months. | ||
In the three months that Trump's been in office, there have been no bird flu cases found in humans. | ||
Isn't that a coincidence? | ||
Now there's a story at Infowars. | ||
COVID-19 vaccines may reduce women's lifelong supply of eggs, drastically reducing their fertility, according to a new study. | ||
The study, conducted by Turkish researchers, investigated the effects of the mRNA and non-mRNA vaccines on female reproductive health. | ||
Female rats were given COVID vaccinations and their ovarian tissue was harvested and analyzed. | ||
The results showed that administration of both kinds of vaccines reduced the number of primordial follicles which go on to become eggs and are limited in number. | ||
The potential implications for women are serious. | ||
If these findings indeed apply to humans, the implications for global fertility rates are profound, wrote. | ||
Epidemiologist Nick Holscher on Substack. | ||
He added this kind of damage to a woman's lifelong egg supply is biologically irreversible. | ||
The loss of primordial follicles is permanent. | ||
They do not regenerate. | ||
If this applies to humans, it means early menopause, infertility and plummeting birth rates. | ||
The new study also showed other worrying reproductive changes in the ovarian tissues of female rats. | ||
Levels of crucial hormone decreased, which is indicative of reduced reproductive health, and an enzyme associated with a variety of conditions, including fibrosis and follicle damage, was increased. | ||
These changes were particularly marked in rats that were administered mRNA vaccines. | ||
Another recent study showed that Czech women who received COVID-19 vaccines had roughly one Third, fewer successful pregnancies than unvaccinated women. | ||
The total fertility rate in Czech Republic decreased 21% during the period of the study. | ||
So again, I mean, is there anything I can say to adequately emphasize what's happening here, what has happened here? | ||
I don't know I don't know how else to put it. | ||
These people committed a genocide on the entire world. | ||
This was a depopulation program of unbelievable success. | ||
And it just goes into what we've been talking about with COVID for a while and the COVID vaccines and the fact that these are not classified as genetic therapies because, theoretically, The spike protein should have only been generated for a couple of hours following the vaccination and then stopped. | ||
And genetic therapies require a continual change in cellular behavior. | ||
But here we are several years following the first injections and people are still finding spike proteins reproducing in their bodies continuously. | ||
And these spike proteins... | ||
Happen to gather in, coagulate in things like women's ovaries, drastically reducing their ability to reproduce. | ||
21% collapse in reproduction during the Czech study. | ||
21%. | ||
If that doesn't send chills down your spine, if that doesn't reveal... | ||
Just how truly diabolical these people are, I really don't know what else will. | ||
If only we could wave some sort of magic wand or something, it's just like we could take the energy of a UK team winning a soccer game and have that same level of reaction to the fact that the entire world Was forcibly inoculated with infertility drugs, maybe we could turn this thing around. | ||
Maybe if the fact that you and your family were directly targeted with an extermination plot, I would hope that that would maybe inspire some emotional response, some aggressive action in return. | ||
No, most people will never even hear about this. | ||
I guess it's up to us to try to again impress upon people the real just cataclysmic scale of the attack that humanity is under with the knowledge that this was done right out in the open and the people involved are still out there still giving COVID vaccines to little children. | ||
Honestly, sick beyond anything you can imagine. | ||
Clip number 12 here is Michael Yeadon talking about the COVID vaccine formulation chosen with the full knowledge of what it would do to women's reproduction. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
The mRNA products from Moderna and Pfizer. | ||
BioNTech, they were encapsulated in a formulation. | ||
It's normal to formulate drugs to give them structure and to allow them to travel around the body in slow release and so on. | ||
What did they pick? | ||
Lipid nanoparticles. | ||
The macro carriers for these molecules are known to have a characteristic that's rather upsetting. | ||
That characteristic is they accumulate in the ovaries of every species tested. | ||
This formulation was chosen In my view, in the full knowledge that it would accumulate in the ovaries of girls and women. | ||
That, I'm afraid, ladies and gentlemen, is what's happened to every single female who administered this material. | ||
They knew exactly what they were doing. | ||
They knew exactly what the outcome of this would be. | ||
And they did it on purpose. | ||
Again, it's hard to fathom. | ||
The real scale of this. | ||
Now, the French government apparently has observed some other interesting consequences of the vaccine shot. | ||
This is from TPV Sean. | ||
French government admit vaccinated citizens have been injected with mystery nanotech. | ||
... | ||
Forensic investigators have observed a series of highly unusual phenomena in the body of the recently deceased, all whom have received the full COVID-19 vaccinations. | ||
Among the findings, synthetic, unnatural, thread-like structures embedded deep in organic tissue, unexplained magnetic anomalies near the injection site, And in several cases, emissions of short-range wireless signals from the bodies of the vaccinated, including frequencies commonly associated with Wi-Fi and Bluetooth technology. | ||
Officials insist the findings are being misinterpreted, citing environmental contamination and postmortem artifacts, but multiple insiders have confirmed the data and they're calling it unprecedented. | ||
Of course, you remember, during COVID and during the rollout of the vaccine, People realized that magnets would stick to the injection site of people who just received the COVID injection and would not stick to the arms of people who had not. | ||
Now, this is one of those cases where it's like, you can claim not to believe this. | ||
You can claim this is a conspiracy theory of some sort, but we all saw the video. | ||
And if you were injected, you could do it yourself. | ||
Just like so many conspiracies recently, it's just one of these cases where there's no explanation for this. | ||
You could do the experiment yourself and confirm the outcome. | ||
And nobody acknowledged it. | ||
Nobody officially had anything to say about it or had any reason to suggest a... | ||
You know, reasonable explanation. | ||
There was none. | ||
So we know it lowers fertility. | ||
We know it causes heart attacks and myocarditis. | ||
We know it is almost certainly the fuel behind the rise in, the very dramatic, by the way, rise in sudden unexpected so-called, quote, turbo cancers. | ||
We know it massively lowers fertility as the spike protein gathers in ovaries. | ||
We also have had Studies recently confirm vaccine shedding so that even if you avoided being forcibly injected, spending enough time around somebody who was will give you the same symptoms. | ||
So where are the Nuremberg trials? | ||
As we get more and more and more and more information about just how deliberately deadly these shots were. | ||
How long are we going to wait to move on this? | ||
I guess that just makes it sort of in line with everything else that we cover. | ||
This was from Real Patrick Webb over the weekend. | ||
FBI Director Cash Patel suggests that James Comey, Andrew McCabe, Peter Strzok, and James Baker may have potentially committed multiple crimes during Crossfire Hurricane investigation. | ||
As I go, really? | ||
Really? | ||
Oh, they may have committed crimes during the Crossfire Hurricane investigation. | ||
You mean the investigation where they used a foreign actor's Clinton-funded dossier to fraudulently achieve FISA warrants to spy on the anti-establishment presidential candidate? | ||
Place bugs and even personal assets into Trump Tower, embed spies in his campaign in an attempt to rig the election. | ||
You're saying that part of that might have been a crime? | ||
Every step of it was a whole host of crimes. | ||
So forgive me if I'm not over the moon at the fact that Cash Patel has said that, yeah, maybe, maybe Comey committed some crimes. | ||
Maybe Baker committed some crimes. | ||
Maybe Peter Strzok might have committed some crimes. | ||
We have them admitting it in their own words, okay? | ||
It's just like, how many times do we have to go over this? | ||
How many times do we have to reiterate the innumerable crimes that we know 100% certain? | ||
With 100% certainty that they committed. | ||
They may have committed some crimes. | ||
Well, maybe you should investigate that then. | ||
Oh, what's that you did for years? | ||
Oh, you had special counsels investigate it and, again, confirm what we've known the whole time, that these people were just abject criminals, just abusing every aspect of our spy state in an attempt to rig our sacred democracy. | ||
They would go on to shed crocodile tears over when a bunch of Republicans took unapproved tours through the Capitol. | ||
unidentified
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Our democracy, our sacred democracy. | |
And these same people dismantling democracy from the inside out. | ||
I mean, how many times do we have to go over this? | ||
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I mean, how many times do we have to go over this? | |
COVID was created in a lab and released on purpose. | ||
The vaccine is a weapon of mass destruction. | ||
The 2020 election was rigged. | ||
The 2016 election they attempted to rig and committed innumerable crimes trying to crush the will of the American people and rig the election in favor of Hillary Clinton herself, who is a just rampant criminal who's never been made to pay the price for it. | ||
They opened up our borders and flooded us with tens of millions of illegal immigrants that the Supreme Court has said that we can't do anything about. | ||
We have to provide them all due process like they're American criminals, making it completely impossible to deport the number of people with the resources that we have. | ||
All of these things are pretty much undeniable. | ||
They were obvious from the very beginning, but over the ensuing years, we have seen just an avalanche of evidence for all of this stuff. | ||
And nobody has paid the price for it. | ||
Nobody's been arrested. | ||
Nobody's been charged. | ||
And the people that we fought like hell to get in positions of power have seemingly flipped. | ||
And that's the only way that I can see this. | ||
As we go now to a video of Kash Patel and... | ||
Don Bongino. | ||
Just saying things that we just know aren't true. | ||
We just know this stuff is crooked and it's infuriating to see these people say this. | ||
Let's go. | ||
I guess we'll go to clip number seven here. | ||
Cash Patel and Don Bongino on the Epstein. | ||
Suicide. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
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You said Jeffrey Epstein committed suicide. | |
People don't believe it. | ||
Well, I mean, listen, they have a right to their opinion, but as someone who has worked as a public defender, as a prosecutor, who's been in that prison system, who's been in the Metropolitan Detention Center, who's been in segregated housing, you know a suicide when you see one, and that's what that was. | ||
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He killed himself. | |
Again, you want me to? | ||
I've seen the whole file. | ||
He killed himself. | ||
I know it's hard work. | ||
So who's in charge at the New York FBI field office? | ||
Who's withholding Epstein docs from the Attorney General? | ||
James Dennehy is running the show there. | ||
There he is. | ||
This is the guy who emailed his whole staff to dig in after Trump took office. | ||
And don't forget that James Comey's daughter is an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. | ||
She worked on the Epstein and Maxwell cases. | ||
She's kind of knee-deep in this. | ||
Epstein was facing sex trafficking charges in Lower Manhattan. | ||
Where's all that paperwork? | ||
The FBI sees computers, surveillance videos, banking records, file cabinets, and photographs from all of Epstein's properties in New Mexico, the Virgin Islands, Palm Beach, and in New York. | ||
The Justice Department also gave Epstein a sweetheart non-prosecution deal 17 years ago. | ||
Where are those files? | ||
The Bureau of Prisons. | ||
Where are those files? | ||
You remember where Epstein killed himself? | ||
I asked Bill Barr about that, why everything seemed to go wrong that night. | ||
When I first heard all the information and all the coincidences here, I was suspicious. | ||
What were the coincidences? | ||
I mean, those were a lot of coincidences. | ||
Well, one of the cameras was out. | ||
Right. | ||
He was supposed to have a cellmate. | ||
Cellmate left. | ||
They didn't replace the cellmate. | ||
And the guards who were supposed to check them every half hour didn't check them. | ||
My EMT source said he was on the scene immediately to pull Epstein's body out to the morgue. | ||
And when he got to the cell, he saw seven people there touching Epstein's body and moving stuff around. | ||
So, I mean, what do you make of this? | ||
What do you make of this? | ||
Clearly, I don't think anybody is going to be convinced by this. | ||
I don't know anybody who thinks that Epstein killed himself is going, well, Cash Patel and Dan Bongino said it was a suicide, so I guess it's a suicide. | ||
I guess we can move on. | ||
Nobody is going to buy this, so why are they even saying it? | ||
Yeah, Alex Jones put out a statement on this. | ||
Overall, I think Cash Patel and Dan Bongino are doing a great job, but on the claim that Epstein's death is not a cover-up I call BS, Epstein confirmed a suicide. | ||
And yeah, this is from the SCIF, the Intel SCIF. | ||
Number one, Maureen Comey, former disgraced FBI director James Comey's daughter, was in charge of Epstein's alleged suicide investigation, which is not a good start. | ||
And Maureen allegedly lost the jailhouse CCTV tapes as a result of a technical error. | ||
Then on top of the lost slash erased tapes through a, quote, technical error, both security cards, quote, fell asleep. | ||
We were supposed to be watching Epstein's cell who was on 24-hour surveillance for suicide watch, which is standard procedure in every jail and being a high-profile prisoner. | ||
Others claim the guards were paid not to talk. | ||
Either way, for the tapes to mysteriously go missing or erased and not one but two guards both fall asleep. | ||
Coincidentally, the odds of both of these things happening happen to occur at the same time in the same place are astronomical. | ||
We know the Comeys are corrupt. | ||
James Comey just sent a dog whistle to have our sitting president assassinated. | ||
Why do you think he would do that? | ||
What does Comey, the Clintons, and Obamas all have to hide? | ||
Are you paying attention to Trump's recent post? | ||
Are you starting to connect the dots? | ||
Remember, there are no coincidences. | ||
Do you think they're telling the truth? | ||
What do you think really happened to Epstein? | ||
Again, who is going to buy this? | ||
So no new information has been presented. | ||
And what Cash for Tell and Dan Bongino say is, well, we've seen the files and it was definitely a suicide. | ||
Okay, so you've seen the cover-up files and you believe them, essentially. | ||
Why? | ||
Why do you believe them? | ||
And that doesn't even get into the broken vertebrae, the impossible condition, situation in which he killed himself. | ||
I mean, none of this makes any sense. | ||
So again, it's not a situation where these guys get into office and when they say Epstein kills himself, it makes us... | ||
You know, more trusting of that story, it makes us think that Cash Patel and Bongino have been compromised somehow. | ||
Because no matter how certain you think you are about this, the bare facts of the situation means you cannot say with certainty that he killed himself. | ||
You just can't. | ||
Do they have video of it? | ||
Well, no. | ||
The CCTV things broke. | ||
Well, do you have an eyewitness? | ||
Well, no. | ||
The guards on staff at the time fell asleep, apparently, during it. | ||
So all you have is the body and the staged crime scene, which, again, as you heard, seven different people were in there messing with it by the time the investigators even arrived. | ||
So there is no way for Dan Bongino and Castro Tell to actually have that level of certainty that, It was a suicide, from what we know in particular. | ||
Even the most, you know, dedicated person would have to acknowledge that you cannot make this claim with certainty, but there they are, making the claim with certainty, suggesting, in my opinion, a betrayal of the people that sent him there, because we're not buying it, and nor should we. | ||
On the other side, we're going to be welcoming Ian Carroll. | ||
I do want to remind you that there is a very cool knife now for sale at thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
It's the Midnight Riders tactical dagger with the signing of the declaration on one side and the Midnight Ride of Paul Revere on the other. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you so much for being here this morning. | |
I want to get your take first on the Russia collusion part of that interview. | ||
What struck you? | ||
I was fascinated. | ||
There's nobody better than Cash and Dan, or I should say Director Patel and Deputy Director Bongino. | ||
Those two guys know more about the Russia hoax than anyone else that's out there. | ||
And I'm going to be fascinated to see what this new information is that they found buried somewhere within that Hoover building, because I do think that transparency is key. | ||
And now that we have Ed Martin, who was supposed to be the U.S. attorney in Washington, D.C., now the president has appointed him to go after this. | ||
Both Cash and Dan were pretty clear. | ||
They're going to follow the facts. | ||
They're going to provide transparency. | ||
And then ultimately, it's up to the Department of Justice to hold these dirty cops responsible for what they've drugged this country through for the last almost decade now. | ||
unidentified
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Well, you've called Jim Comey like a figurehead, but talked about others who are really driving this lie. | |
Let me ask you this. | ||
Who do you believe was the mastermind behind the Russia collusion lie? | ||
Well, there's a lot of masterminds, but I think, in general, this was lit on fire by Obama, Team Obama and his team, after Trump won in 2016. | ||
So they could have stopped it. | ||
They should have stopped it. | ||
Instead, they lit the fuse. | ||
They put out a BS intelligence report, if you recall, right before the president came in. | ||
They framed General Flynn. | ||
They framed the entire Trump administration. | ||
And then they appointed Mueller. | ||
So once Trump fired Comey, Mueller gets appointed. | ||
And then we lived through that Mueller witch hunt for years. | ||
And I think... | ||
Me personally, I think if you're going to find criminality, it's going to be with Mueller and his witch hunters that were there for so many years. | ||
I think that's where you're going to find the corruption. | ||
So it wasn't just the—I said this many times, Maria, and I think it was lost on people. | ||
It wasn't just about all the corruption that they did to create and manufacture. | ||
It's the Russia hoax. | ||
The Mueller investigation itself was a hoax and was illegal. | ||
When Mueller walked into that door, how many times did I say it? | ||
He said, where are the Russians? | ||
Oh, sir, there are none. | ||
Why didn't Mueller leave? | ||
Why did all those people work for years? | ||
Why did they hide the information from Congress for so many years? | ||
I think you're going to find many of those top-level lawyers and FBI agents, as Cash said. | ||
Did not conduct themselves in a professional manner. | ||
And I think if interviewed again, you could maybe get to the bottom of it. | ||
But look, you have two guys that want to get to the bottom of it. | ||
I have every faith that they will. | ||
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|
I want to ask you about McCabe, Strzok and the rest. | |
Let's take a break and come right back. | ||
I'm talking with Devin Nunes. | ||
We'll be right back on Sunday Morning Futures. | ||
Welcome back. | ||
I'm back with former House Intelligence Committee chairman and the CEO of Trump Media and Technology Group, owner of Truth Social, Devin Nunes. | ||
Devin, you just mentioned Robert Mueller. | ||
Is that where we're going to see accountability? | ||
Are we not going to see any accountability from the likes of McCabe, Strzok, and what about Comey? | ||
Well, Dan and Cash are part of the cleanup crew now. | ||
So, because you had the initial criminality, you had the Clinton campaign doing what they did, then you have Obama that basically lights the fuse. | ||
Well, then you had Mueller who basically came in and covered it all up. | ||
So I think when you go in and start to look at that, remember, like everybody's paying attention to Biden and recently these her tapes were released and everybody knew, now they act like they knew that Biden was essentially out of it. | ||
Before Biden craziness, you had Mueller craziness. | ||
So I just believe that the agents and people that moved from the Russia hoax into the Mueller witch hunt hoax, those people need to be interviewed and there should be accountability there. | ||
I'm really anxious and want to learn from what Director Patel said, this new information, I wonder. | ||
If it does have to do with that. | ||
I don't know yet. | ||
I'm sure that we will see it at the president's intelligence board. | ||
We will get all that information. | ||
The president's been very clear with me when he asked me to take on this role. | ||
He wants the corruption cleaned out. | ||
He wants the politicization cleaned up. | ||
And I think what we're seeing here is you've got to have transparency. | ||
You now have Ed Martin put in place in Washington, D.C. Now, look, we can't deal with the court, the justices and that problem, but we'll have to deal with it one day at a time. | ||
unidentified
|
I mentioned Judge Boasberg. | |
He was the one who gave Kevin Kleinsmith a smack on the wrist when Kevin Kleinsmith said, no, Carter Page is not a CIA asset, which he was. | ||
So there's Devin Nunez on Maria Bartiromo's program saying that Dan and Cash are now part of the cover-up. | ||
What do we have to do? | ||
How many elections do we have to win to get a little bit of justice around here? | ||
We'll be joined by Ian Carroll next. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, joined today by Ian Carroll. | ||
He is, of course, an expert researcher following the money in pursuit of the truth. | ||
You can find him on X and YouTube at IanCarrollShow, and you can support him by getting a cool shirt at CancelIanCarroll.com. | ||
That's IanCarrollShow on X and YouTube and the website CancelIanCarroll.com. | ||
And, of course, he's been hosting the Candace Owens show while she is on maternity leave. | ||
How are you doing, Ian? | ||
Doing great. | ||
Good to talk to you, Harrison. | ||
Good to talk to you. | ||
How's your stint with Candice been? | ||
I've been catching a few shows. | ||
What's it like taking over for such a media maverick? | ||
It's awesome. | ||
She's got a great team, really capable people, and it's cool to take over for, you know, at least briefly for a show that is so in line with the way I think in terms of doing deep digs into real corruption. | ||
And not really having any rails or rules other than, you know, follow the truth and try to report honestly. | ||
I've learned a lot from them, and we've been breaking a really wild story in the private equity world that I'm sure you've heard a little bit about, and there's still more to come on it. | ||
So it's been a fun time. | ||
Yeah, and that's why I wanted to have you on today to talk about private equity as a concept. | ||
We had Tiffany Cianci on a couple weeks ago. | ||
The first time I'd heard about just how damaging private equity has been to the American retail landscape. | ||
Things like Joanne's Fabrics going out of business despite 97% of their stores being profitable. | ||
Yeah, I mean, the problem is vastly larger than anyone tends to understand. | ||
And it's been growing for a long time. | ||
One of the first places that private equity, meaning money held by private individuals, billionaires, multimillionaires, the very rich and wealthy, they pool their money into these funds and then leverage it in all sorts of ways to buy companies, to leverage investments, all sorts of stuff. | ||
And it makes them richer. | ||
And it certainly doesn't seem to benefit any of us. | ||
And one of the most obvious early examples is how Toys R Us got bought out by Bain Capital and KKR. | ||
Through Toys R Us, the private equity community in general realized that you can make an awful lot of money off of a buyout and mismanagement of a company into bankruptcy without even needing to make the company succeed. | ||
You can extract fees. | ||
You can extract all sorts of value out of the company and then leave it broke and destitute and just move on to the next investment. | ||
And that trend really has accelerated over the last 20 years to the point where it's now sort of the status quo among a lot of private equity sectors. | ||
And private equity is starting to buy up whole segments of business and wrap it up into one conglomerated business. | ||
They call it a platform, meaning you'll buy up a whole bunch of different businesses related to home improvement or related to children's services like after-school daycare and toddler gyms and adventure and trampoline parks. | ||
And that way you sort of have an ecosystem of businesses that can target the same customers over and over and over and can cross advertise between them. | ||
And that is a smart idea. | ||
The problem is that private equity is incentivized strictly to maximize returns as quickly as possible and not to take care of their workers, not to take care of their customers, not to make America a better place. | ||
And the outcome, once you start to dig into it, is dark. | ||
And lastly, I'll say to get us open here is that the reason why most people, regular people, have never heard about it is because of the secret court system in America called arbitration. | ||
And arbitration is... | ||
It's been going on for a long time, and some people have probably heard about it a little bit, but most people have no understanding of it, because in arbitration, all of the rulings are sealed, everything is done in secret, it's not an official court, the arbitrators, which act as judges, are not actually required to follow the law, and everything is for profit. | ||
So it's a really dark underbelly of how America's working, and when you really start to dig it open, you realize that justice in America is already gone, and if you wind up in the wrong situation, You wind up in an arbitration court. | ||
You really don't have the rights that you think you have. | ||
And on top of that, the judge themselves and the whole court system is paid for by the private equity company, right? | ||
So you've got this faux legal system that in fact is there to serve the people paying the judges and the outcomes always go in their favor. | ||
And then you're not even allowed to talk about it because as part of the arbitration clause, you agree to accept the outcome of the proceedings and not discuss it or try to find some ulterior mode of seeking justice. | ||
And again, it makes you – It begs the question to me, like, okay, if you're going to take over Joanne's Fabrics, which I think is one of the most recent but also the most pertinent example because, again, the stats, 97% of their brick-and-mortar stores were profitable. | ||
There was no problem. | ||
There was no issue there. | ||
And suddenly they go bankrupt. | ||
And you go, okay. | ||
Why would they even want to do that? | ||
I mean, here you have this thing that's getting you profit month over month. | ||
Why would you want to kill that golden goose? | ||
And the only reason I can come up with is because they just want people ordering off the internet, off Amazon. | ||
You just cut off all of the overhead expenses of having to have employees and pay for their insurance and have the brick-and-mortar stores and pay for the rent of that. | ||
And so it just seems to me like, okay, they're just trying to destroy the brick-and-mortar retail places. | ||
To shovel everybody online and just be, you know, sourcing things from big warehouses in the middle of nowhere via Amazon rather than, you know, going to a brick-and-mortar store and interacting with human beings. | ||
I mean, what would be the point of shutting down these profitable businesses? | ||
You know, because even just short-term profitability, you know, just getting as many profits as you can as you're shutting them down doesn't seem to me like the long-term, you know, mode of success that these guys would want. | ||
Even if their only goal was to make the most amount of money, why would they shut down these profitable stores? | ||
I mean, what else? | ||
What am I missing here? | ||
Yeah, well, the reasoning is at least twofold. | ||
And you do allude to one of the core reasons that is very subjective and hard to prove, which is sort of like an industry-wide, maybe not collusion, but sentiment that everyone's interests are aligned around Amazon. | ||
And this is especially since COVID-19. | ||
And this is what drove the GameStop debacle in 2021. | ||
The bankruptcy of Bed Bath& Beyond, Joanne's Fabrics, many, many other classical retailers that were prime targets not just for private equity and for these hedge fund managers that are going to make money from inside of the company, but also for short sellers in the financial industry that want to short sell these companies into non-existence on the way down. | ||
So there is a certain amount of Amazon-related incentive to tank these brick-and-mortar retailers. | ||
The other side of it, this profit-taking side from the private equity side, certainly they could make good long-term returns by exercising the exact same franchising model that has always worked, which is supposed to be a way to support regular Americans starting a small business by buying into a franchise. | ||
They get to leverage the economy of scale of being a part of this giant corporation, but they also still get to run their own business and enrich their own community. | ||
When those franchisees, these small business owners, do well and they make money, then royalties are paid back to the parent company and the owners of that company also make money. | ||
That is the old model, and that's how franchising has always been supposed to work. | ||
The problem is that you can make a lot more money a lot faster if you're turning these things over quickly, loading them up with debt. | ||
For example, one of the most common tactics that was used in Toys R Us and has been used in almost every one ever since, including Red Lobster, is When you buy one of these companies, you immediately sell off all of the real estate that the company owns to your buddies in the real estate industry, take a quick paycheck, send all that money to your investors, cha-ching, and then you start leasing back the properties on loans that you originally had already owned. | ||
And so that immediately loads these companies up with an insane amount of debt, but all those profits are taken and immediately distributed to the private equity shareholders. | ||
That's just one example that's really obvious, but the same thing happens over and over. | ||
For example, If you were to buy a new Subway franchise and open a Subway in your town, the first year you'd have all these expenses where you'd be buying new slicers and buying new branding and getting a paint job and remodeling the building. | ||
And all of those expenses send kickbacks up to the big boys that are selling you all those things. | ||
They have contracts around all those things. | ||
They have tech fees. | ||
They have advertising fees. | ||
And all those fees have grown substantially over the last decade. | ||
As new ways for private equity to suck money out of a new franchise as it opens. | ||
And so they started to do the math on this stuff and realized that they can just charge exorbitant fees in that first year or two of a new franchise opening. | ||
And it's actually much more profitable to have a franchise open and then go out of business and a new franchise open and go out of business and on and on and on. | ||
And there are exceptions to the rule, but in general, that seems to be the playbook that's being used. | ||
And it's sort of as a form of debt slavery, where these small business owners are taking out massive amounts of loans and debt to sign these contracts with these giant franchises. | ||
And that contract not only contracts them to the franchise and to the debt that they're taking out to open it, but it also contracts them to the secret arbitration clauses so that when they go bankrupt, when they're exploited, they don't even have any recourse because they can't go to court about it. | ||
They're forced into private arbitration. | ||
Where the rulings are all secret, and they get bled dry even more, and they wind up broke and destitute. | ||
And it's a really tragic situation that the same type of strategy is being used in lots of different industries, like long-haul trucking, to sort of exploit new labor and loans and debt-based waging and working. | ||
It's just really obvious in this private equity and franchising world, and it is an epidemic that is threatening sort of our entire economy in some ways. | ||
It's threatening huge sectors of what we think of as Yeah, and it's absolutely exploding in popularity, as you said. | ||
I mean, the share of the market that's, you know, being taken in by private equity is just absolutely massive now. | ||
And it's had a very rapid growth in very short history. | ||
And one of the things I'm about to read from this article, but, you know, I asked the crew to find me some articles about private equity just to have on hand while you're here. | ||
And weirdly, like, they're all from super far left. | ||
I've got one from Jacobin. | ||
I've got one from The Atlantic. | ||
And it's like, why is it the far left that's gone after this? | ||
Is it because it's just an aspect of capitalism and they hate capitalism? | ||
How do we get the right wing aware of what's going on here? | ||
Because I don't see this as a partisan issue. | ||
I see this as an issue affecting absolutely everybody all over America. | ||
I mean, there's absolutely no reason why there should be a partisan divide on this. | ||
Who is in favor of these, you know, faceless? | ||
Megacorporations coming in and shutting down profitable small businesses. | ||
I mean, this is, to me, I'm outraged by this because I'm a capitalist, because I see this as being a total distortion and perversion of what should be the guardrails keeping our market functional and actually serving the people. | ||
But the left seems to dominate this space. | ||
I mean, I see this as somewhere we could find unity, I would hope, Ian. | ||
But can you speak to that a little bit? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
And you're right that largely, historically, the left has been outspoken about this because of the capitalism, because of the billionaires, because of the wealthy, you know, the Bernie Sanders kind of a pitch. | ||
And they're not entirely wrong, but the problem is that it's not even capitalism. | ||
And it's not capitalism that's the problem here. | ||
Capitalism would save this system. | ||
And the reason why the right has been so slow to get on this train is because so much of these rulings are secret. | ||
So little of the information actually comes out, and it's really easy to sweep it under the rug as just some small little mismanagement or some small little issue or some isolated event over there when it does happen. | ||
But the issue is that this is a subversion of capitalism at its core, and this is not a free market. | ||
These are not free market economics. | ||
And fundamentally, it's a perversion of the justice system and a perversion of the Constitution. | ||
It's a stripping of the rights of Americans. | ||
And more and more the cases are stacking up where private equity bought up all the nursing homes and then started just blatantly mismanaging nursing homes and killing thousands of elderly people. | ||
They're buying up all the veterinary clinics and suddenly pets are all dying and no one has any recourse. | ||
Everything's going to private arbitration. | ||
They're doing the same thing. | ||
There's this whole case at Massage Envy where women were being raped and assaulted during massages at Massage Envy. | ||
And over 180 women eventually were able to bring a class action claim against Massage Envy. | ||
And it actually changed the laws where no longer can you hide sexual assault and rape allegations in private arbitration. | ||
But all these other cases are still being covered up this way. | ||
And so I think the right is slow to move because the information is slow to get out, and it takes brave people like Tiffany Sianci to come out and sort of whistleblow and release files and release documents that they've accumulated and really tell the stories that no one else is able to tell. | ||
Yeah, and again, this is one thing that, as I look around all of the stuff that we talk about on a daily basis, the geopolitics, the corruption, I mean, a lot of it is worth paying attention to, but this is one place that I thought, okay, Here, I really want to use my platform to try to get this information out because I think this is somewhere where if more people knew what was going on, | ||
if there was a political push to actually do something about this, we could actually tangibly solve a problem that is, you know, in secret and very quietly dismantling our entire society right under our noses. | ||
This is from The Atlantic. | ||
Just to give you an idea of like... | ||
What a big deal this is. | ||
This is from The Atlantic all the way back in 2023. | ||
The secret of industry devouring the U.S. economy. | ||
And just to give you an idea of what exactly we're talking about when we say private equity, when a private equity fund buys a publicly traded company, it takes the company private, hence the name. | ||
This gives the fund total control, which in theory allows it to find ways to boost profits so it can sell the company for a big payday a few years later. | ||
In practice, going private can have more troubling consequences. | ||
The thing about public companies is that they're, well, public. | ||
By law, they have to disclose information about their finances, operation, business risks, and legal liabilities. | ||
Taking a company to private exempts it from those requirements, just in line with what we're talking about, the secret courts and all this stuff. | ||
In 2000, in the year 2000, private equity firms managed only 4% of the total U.S. corporate equity. | ||
By 2021, that number was closer to 20%. | ||
It's even higher now, obviously. | ||
That was four years ago at this point. | ||
It's at least up to 25%. | ||
I mean, at least a quarter of our economy is being managed by these private equity firms. | ||
That is a massive, massive shift in a very short amount of time. | ||
20 years to capture a quarter of the economy, and it's only getting bigger. | ||
I mean, this is like a cancerous growth on our market that has to be dealt with. | ||
And right now, we're walking around totally undiagnosed at this point. | ||
You want to talk about New World Order? | ||
That is the New World Order right there. | ||
That is the ownership class. | ||
The wealthy just buying up and buying up and buying up on all this money that was printed during COVID, all these gains that were illegally gotten during COVID. | ||
And suddenly they have all this extra capital to expend and they're doing it. | ||
They're using it to buy up full swaths of our economy and our daily lives. | ||
And most people don't realize how beholden they already are to the system. | ||
Because when you utilize all the services owned by these private equity companies, you sign contracts, whether you know it or not, that Commits you to their rules and commits you to private arbitration if anything goes wrong. | ||
And so, as an example, this is one that Tiffany Cianci often talks about in all these different areas, is on your phone, every single one of your apps that you signed, the little terms of agreements without thinking about it, every one of those apps has an arbitration agreement in it. | ||
Last year, there was a case where an Uber driver got into a car crash. | ||
The mother and father of a child were nearly killed. | ||
Massive hospital bills. | ||
And because their daughter had ordered on Uber Eats years prior and had signed their daughter, their seven-year-old or some young child daughter, had signed the terms of agreements for Uber Eats that included some clause. | ||
It made it so that they could not litigate in court against Uber. | ||
The same is true when you buy a washing machine. | ||
The same is true when you go to the trampoline park or when you go to basically anything in public life now that you want to go do, you would expect to have rights. | ||
That corporation that you're at doing business wrongs you if they steal from you, if their product is defective, if it blows up. | ||
If anything goes wrong, you expect to have rights like a normal citizen. | ||
But the problem is that more and more, everything we do out in the world comes with a waiver. | ||
And that waiver signs away your rights to a court and to a trial and to a jury and whatever else. | ||
And instead, you're signing to go to arbitration. | ||
And in arbitration, the big guy always wins. | ||
It's somewhere between 2% and 6%. | ||
Of cases go in favor of the little guy because those courts are constantly making money off of servicing the big guy and they are not required to follow the law or report what happens. | ||
And so a lot of people don't realize that as private equity buys up more and more of our world, all the things they buy, suddenly you don't have rights when you interact with those things if something goes wrong. | ||
And so it's this weird double standard where the ownership class is buying up our world. | ||
And we're not even noticing that as they do that, the American Constitution is dissolving. | ||
Because every single time you utilize those services, you sign a little document that says, I waive my rights to my constitutional rights if this company, if we ever have a dispute. | ||
And you don't need your rights when everything's fine. | ||
You need your rights when something goes wrong. | ||
More and more Americans are finding in arbitration court that they don't have rights when something goes wrong. | ||
Yeah, and it reminds me of things like... | ||
Big corporations buying up all the houses, right? | ||
Buying up all of the single family homes. | ||
And yeah, it's bad because, you know, a family can't compete with a multinational corporation. | ||
They can, you know, outbid you by $100,000 and pay cash. | ||
So, you know, you're kind of crap out of luck there. | ||
But more importantly, I think, is the idea that if you don't own your home, then they can search your home without your permission because they can just go to the landlord in the same way that if they want to get your, you know, communications. | ||
DMs on Twitter. | ||
They don't have to go to a court and get a warrant to search your stuff. | ||
They can just ask the corporation, and the information belongs to the corporation. | ||
They can hand it over without even demanding a warrant. | ||
So it's a circumvention of your constitutionally protected rights through these corporate machinations. | ||
And if they do that, if they search your home or they search your Twitter without your consent, you would expect to have legal recourse to then sue your landlord or to sue Twitter, but... | ||
You sign an arbitration agreement when you sign up for Twitter. | ||
You sign an arbitration agreement on most leases these days, especially if you lease from a private equity-owned company like a lot of Blackstone is buying up a lot of single-family homes. | ||
And so in people's lease contracts, often there are arbitration agreements that would prevent you from going. | ||
And the arbitration agreements in leases are currently being litigated, whether that's even remotely legal or not. | ||
But it's just more examples of where... | ||
Yes, they're taking away your constitutional rights, and where you think you have recourse, it turns out you've already signed a document that signed away your rights to that recourse. | ||
Yeah, so again, while the left seems to have a monopoly on talking about this stuff, the right has a very good reason to be concerned about this. | ||
They're destroying our constitutional rights through these legal loopholes, I guess you could call them. | ||
And I always point out, America has a very long history of using the government to stop exploitation by corporations. | ||
Our history is full of- Trustbusters and Teddy Roosevelt coming in and stopping exploitation from corporations using the power of the government. | ||
There's nothing inherently left about that. | ||
It's American. | ||
I mean, that is a very American thing to do, to not be oppressed. | ||
And somehow people have been sort of tricked into thinking that this is a capitalism versus communism kind of breakdown. | ||
But the reality is, no, Americanism says that corporations are there to serve the people. | ||
And when they become destructive of those ends, the government steps in to set things right. | ||
I think the government has a very important role to play here because you and I as individuals cannot do much to stop private equity doing what they're doing now. | ||
But I wonder if the government can either because what they're doing is so on the cusp of legality. | ||
I mean, is private equity breaking the law here or are they just acting immorally? | ||
There's two answers to that question, Harrison. | ||
And one is... | ||
Not you, like in some regards, no. | ||
A lot of what we're talking about here is legal. | ||
The way that private equity does leverage buyouts, the way they sell off the land, the way they take on all this debt and extract all this value from these companies, technically that's all legal. | ||
That being said, during the process in arbitration court, anytime something goes wrong or gets litigated in arbitration, often, as I'm showing examples of on the Candace show right now as I go through this case that Tiffany Sianci is exposing, often a lot of illegal things are done. | ||
Directly in a court of law, directly under oath, and it's never prosecuted because arbitration courts are not required to follow the law, and the arbitrators can rule in any way that they see fit. | ||
And so it would actually be quite simple for the government to do any number of things to write this system at least a little bit. | ||
And the first one might just be requiring arbitrators to follow the law. | ||
Which sounds insane that we would even have to ask for such a thing. | ||
But arbitrators are functioning as judges. | ||
They're functioning in lieu of a court, and they're functioning in lieu of a judge. | ||
And, you know, they pitch it as, like, it'll be cheaper and faster, and it's just a simpler way so you can avoid court. | ||
In reality, it's far more expensive, takes far longer, and the deck is stacked far more against you. | ||
And... | ||
The judge in an arbitration court does not have to follow the law. | ||
So it would be very simple for us to just call for our government to at least require arbitrators to follow the law. | ||
Because, speaking of monopolies, the entire arbitration industry is one giant monopoly. | ||
And it's largely run by just two big corporations. | ||
It gets deeper, deeper. | ||
We'll get into that and so much more on the other side. | ||
More with Ian Carroll. | ||
Stay with us, folks. | ||
We've barely scratched the surface of this corruption. | ||
It gets crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back, folks. | |
This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Final segment for today's broadcast. | ||
We're joined by Ian Carroll. | ||
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And keep this small business out of the hands of the likes of private equity. | ||
Of course, Ian Carroll joins me to discuss the menace of private equity. | ||
And as we were talking in the last segment, and I remembered a story that I'm sure a lot of our audiences, a lot of our audience will remember, one of the most egregious uses of this private... | ||
These private arbitration courts in the recent past and one of the most outrageous attempts by a corporation to use the small text that you sign to be a part of their services. | ||
In this case, it was a wrongful death lawsuit against Disney. | ||
And this was back in September of 2024. | ||
It says news broke last month that Disney sought to use its terms of use against a patron who'd filed a wrongful death lawsuit after it against it after his wife died of an allergic reaction at a restaurant on Disney grounds in Orlando, Florida. | ||
Disney threatened to use restrictive terms from the patron's Disney Plus account to deny his access to court and force him to resolve his claims in private secret arbitration. | ||
In response to the public outcry, Disney reversed itself and let this one lawsuit proceed. | ||
But basically, they were trying to sue Disney after... | ||
His wife died from an allergic reaction at Disney Park, and they said, well, because you signed up for Disney +, because you streamed The Little Mermaid at your house, therefore you can't sue us over wrongful death. | ||
This, of course, was so outrageous and caused such a public outcry, they sort of had to back down, but that's just an extreme example of the way these arbitration courts are used, and usually it's more of a small-term thing, but it can still be a life-destroying process for the people involved in this, and most of the time it goes totally, Unrecognized. | ||
Now, there is a law that's been put forward, the FAIR, FAIR Act, to try to stop the abuse of these types of courts. | ||
But it's never gone anywhere. | ||
It's passed the Congress, I think. | ||
I mean, this has been going on since 2019. | ||
They've been trying to get this FAIR Act passed. | ||
And again, it's the Democrats that are in favor of it and the Republicans who refuse it. | ||
But like we were saying before, I don't see this as a Republican-Democrat thing. | ||
These corporations should not be allowed to kill people and then get away with it because you signed up for Disney Plus a couple months ago. | ||
I mean, that's absurd. | ||
That's a story that just came to mind as something that people may be aware of. | ||
When we left off, you were talking about the fact that these arbitration courts themselves are a monopoly that are controlled by a corporation. | ||
Can you elaborate on that a little bit? | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's very complicated, but the simple version is that when you go to arbitration court, You get to select from various arbitrators and different corporations, different private equity groups will work with different arbitration companies. | ||
And the big two are called AAA and JAMS. | ||
And they handled the vast majority of the arbitration industry to the point of it being basically a monopoly. | ||
And that matters because when you go to arbitration, you are given... | ||
A list of potential arbitrators in the state where you're arbitrating, and each one comes with an hourly price. | ||
And so you're literally given a per-hour fee of how much it's going to cost you to litigate, and you pay your judge by the hour for every element of that case. | ||
And so the theory is that arbitration goes very quickly, it's very short and sweet, and a lot of publications sort of parrot that line. | ||
But in reality, when you wind up in arbitration against a corporation or a private equity company that is trying to destroy you or trying to silence you or shut you down, they can drag that on for over a year. | ||
And you can wind up paying $20,000, $30,000, $40,000 per month. | ||
You can wind up paying hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars in legal fees just for the privilege of going to court where you have virtually no chance of winning in the first place. | ||
And this is not just... | ||
For when there is a genuine dispute that needs to be arbitrated. | ||
This is also for when there's medical malpractice. | ||
We were talking about hospitals and nursing homes and healthcare. | ||
And there's been a lot of exposure in the last couple years of what private equity has been doing in hospitals. | ||
Stats that come from, where is it? | ||
It was the Health Affairs was who released the study. | ||
And they found that after emergency surgery in a private equity-owned hospital, You're 42% more likely to die in the next 30 days than if you got an emergency surgery in a regular hospital. | ||
42% more likely to die. | ||
There is a 25% increase in hospital-acquired conditions, such as central line-associated bloodstream infection. | ||
So it's like, that is a very serious issue. | ||
Your parents dying in a hospital, your wife or husband dying in a hospital due to an emergency surgery gone wrong, or... | ||
Your elder, like your grandparents or parents, mismanaged in elder care facilities and then dying of abuse or neglect or falls or whatever it is. | ||
And then you have to go to arbitration court with the deck stacked against you in this monopolized field. | ||
And one last note on the arbitration industry being monopolized is that as an arbitrator, you're making a lot more money than you used to when you were a practicing judge or a lawyer or whatever your former career was. | ||
But then you become an arbitrator and you're getting paid by the case, paid by the hour, and you get paid by both sides, both the corporation and by the little guy. | ||
But the problem is that if I'm going to arbitration as the little guy that's been wronged, I'm only going to see that arbitrator once in my life, and I'm just going to pay out to him in this one case. | ||
But he's going to keep seeing cases from that private equity firm or from that corporation over and over and over. | ||
And if he doesn't rule in a favorable way to them, the next time they won't choose him. | ||
They'll strike him from the list and they'll choose a different arbitrator that will be favorable. | ||
So the judges, the arbitrators, are actually incentivized to treat their repeat clients well. | ||
Because if they don't get picked for arbitration, they don't get paid. | ||
And so you wind up with these arbitrators that have these repeat clients that are the big boys, the corporations and the private equity firms. | ||
And they rule in favor of them frequently because they know that their livelihood and income is dependent on continually ruling in their favor. | ||
Yeah, it's just brutal to imagine, you know, the little guy, you know, going to this arbitration court, probably putting every, you know, thinking like, all right, I got a chance to say my case here, like putting everything into it, probably investing a lot in a time of energy and the whole time. | ||
The conclusion is foregone, right? | ||
They're not going to win. | ||
They're going to lose. | ||
The whole thing is rigged against them. | ||
I mean, you have people playing and their life or livelihood being decided in this completely rigged system. | ||
It's just absolutely infuriating that they're able to get away with this. | ||
And again, we can't even hear about it because part of the arbitration clauses is usually some sort of non-disclosure agreement where they can't even discuss it. | ||
And you can see in the articles people write about this, people have to use pseudonyms. | ||
They aren't saying who they are because they'll face repercussions if they go public about this. | ||
And again, it's one thing if you talk about something like Joanne's Fabrics or Towards R Us or Hooters or any of these others going out of business. | ||
It's like, okay, I can see how bad this is because I see the way that our entire civilization is being forcibly reorganized to where you're not going to have little mom-and-pop stores. | ||
You go down and do business and build your community. | ||
Instead, you're going to be ordering from some robot in a warehouse somewhere, and that alone is really disgusting and horrifying to me. | ||
But then you bring in things like healthcare, and it's like, this isn't... | ||
You know, just something speculative anymore. | ||
This is a life or death situation. | ||
Vox actually has a very thorough article on this. | ||
Again, we got to go to the lefties to get our information about this because the right wing seems blind to it. | ||
But it talks about, you know, private equity firms buying up emergency rooms. | ||
And this doctor, who again is using a pseudonym because he's afraid of backlash, I can't even tell you how quickly it changed. | ||
The ratio of doctors to other clinicians flipped, shrinking doctor hours to a minimum as the firm moved to save on salaries. | ||
And it just goes on and on about how these emergency rooms were forced to make decisions, make cuts that left people at greater risk of injury or disease or anything else because they're trying to squeeze the most amount of profit out of it. | ||
You can talk about Cold Stone Creamery suddenly charging $15 for a scoop of ice cream, and yeah, that's outrageous, but it's nothing compared to the fact that healthcare is being taken over by this, and emergency rooms are being forced to cut corners to serve private equity. | ||
I mean, if this isn't a big enough deal already, wait till you're trying to get healthcare from one of these corporations and finding that they're cutting you off to save a couple bucks. | ||
I mean, it really is horrifying how wide-scale, how... | ||
I mean, yeah, you're right that there's the downstream effect of when you need healthcare, suddenly it is very underwhelming, very overpriced, very understaffed. | ||
But there's also the upstream part of it where they are taking profits out of public funds because a lot of those hospitals and emergency rooms are largely funded by public money, by our tax dollars. | ||
Same with the nursing homes. | ||
And so that is a strategy that some private equity firms are purposefully employing because they know that they have The government dime coming into their pocketbooks. | ||
And they know that they can be siphoning money out of this just endless stream of public money. | ||
And they can be cutting all the expenses. | ||
They can be doing all the same profit-taking things on the bottom with this guaranteed source of income. | ||
It's predatory on top of predatory on top of predatory. | ||
And the reason why the story that I'm reporting right now on the Candace Owens show is so groundbreaking and important, I think, is because for the first time maybe, Tiffany Sianci has released a whole bunch of files and documents from inside of this process that we're going through and exposing how each step of this works on the ground. | ||
It's one thing to hear that you have no rights in an arbitration or that the deck is stacked against you in an arbitration. | ||
It's another thing to read the transcripts and see when the private equity firm lies objectively on the stand and defames you and makes things up. | ||
That are untrue. | ||
And you're holding in your hands reams of documentation that clearly shows that they just perjured themselves. | ||
And instead, your arbitrator says, no, you may not bring that evidence. | ||
I don't want to see it. | ||
That's the kind of thing that really hits home just how stacked the deck really is. | ||
And when it happens once, maybe it's a bug. | ||
When it happens dozens and dozens and dozens of times across one person's case, suddenly it becomes a feature. | ||
And the more we look into this case and the more we expose the story, The more we realize that this is a feature of the entire system, that the entire system is designed to not just skew in favor of the corporation and private equity, but actually cater to their interests and to legislate in their favor in place of actual legislation, in place of the actual judicial system. | ||
Right, because theoretically, the point of a court is to arrive at a fair decision, arrive at justice. | ||
I mean, that's the reason these... | ||
That courts themselves are impaneled, but that's not the case with private arbitration. | ||
And Tiffany Sianci's is a particularly brutal example where... | ||
I mean, they go out of their way to disadvantage her, and they're allowed to do it through the strictures of these arbitration courts. | ||
Things like the fact that she was having a difficult pregnancy and was trying to tell them, hey, look, I can't be there on this day. | ||
I'm having medical conditions. | ||
And instead of respecting that and going, okay, the purpose of this is to get justice in order to achieve that. | ||
We've got to give her a little breathing room. | ||
They instead double down and go, oh, you're having contractions? | ||
Well... | ||
Now you have to go give a deposition immediately or else you're going to lose this case. | ||
So, you know, it's clear that they are abusing this process to get the results that they want. | ||
Justice never comes into it. | ||
Fairness never comes into it. | ||
It's about using this process in the most abusive way possible. | ||
And for Tiffany Cianci, it was, you know, particularly brutal, like I said. | ||
But hers is really just a... | ||
Just like the Disney example. | ||
It's an example of an extreme, but it's happening at a lower level constantly throughout the entire United States. | ||
And Tiffany Sianci, like many others, I mean, they're just small business owners trying to run a little business in their neighborhood, make some money, build up their portfolio. | ||
I mean, it's the stuff that everybody from every walk of life should be in favor of America being a place where you can do this, where you can start a little gym like she did and build up on that and build yourself a comfortable life through hard work. | ||
That's what America is all about. | ||
And private equity is stopping people from doing that. | ||
And that alone is really outrageous. | ||
But the way they're treating her is particularly horrifying. | ||
And of course, anybody who saw our interview with her will recognize that. | ||
And we're going to have her on later this week to talk more about it. | ||
And again, final words on that before we talk about the explosive growth in private equity. | ||
Yeah, I mean, it's more and more apparent that, yes, Tiffany Sianci's story sounds extreme. | ||
But unfortunately, we don't know for sure, but I suspect that it's not just an extreme. | ||
I suspect that a lot of people have been treated like this, and it's unique and different in every case. | ||
But in Tiffany's case, that difficult pregnancy turned into the opponent, the private equity firm, essentially coercing her into having an abortion against her Catholic faith and against the well-being of her family and her child so that she could continue the case. | ||
They were threatening lawfare on lawfare on lawfare, deposition on deposition on deposition. | ||
And last week, I showed video of one of the depositions after they had forced that abortion of her sort of losing it on the other lawyer to explain exactly what they had put her through. | ||
And that was before, later on, a year later, when they hired a felon with a rap sheet over 80 items long for forgery, animal abuse, evading police, fraudulent documentation. | ||
They hired a felon apparently to forge documents in Tiffany's case. | ||
And to be clear, that's not proven that that's why they hired him. | ||
But it just is a weird coincidence that they hire this 80-count felon who's been in prison multiple times for forgery. | ||
And then right then, a bunch of forged documents that Tiffany Sianci never saw appear in her case and wind up winning a $2.3 million ruling against her. | ||
That's the kind of stuff that is just unbelievable when you hear it on face value. | ||
And then I have the documents. | ||
I have the emails. | ||
I have the actual affidavits and the forgeries and his rap sheet. | ||
And so that's the stuff that we're going to be digging into this week because it really never seems to end. | ||
From stealing IP, to forcing abortions, to hiring felons, to forged documents. | ||
It's like the potential allegations here are endless, and it seems like a bottomless pit. | ||
But the more you look at it, the more you realize it's a feature, not a bug. | ||
Yeah, and again, it's circumventing the court system of the United States, which is set up ostensibly to give a fair playing ground to everybody, right? | ||
It's actually an amazing and kind of beautiful thing that in America, some little old lady can take down or at least take to task a giant corporation like McDonald's because they spilled boiling water on her. | ||
That is the purpose of the American court system is that it doesn't matter if they're a multinational corporation and you're just some little old lady living on retirement. | ||
You have a even, you know, playing field where you and they are on the same level and and have to, you know, provide the same evidence for your claims. | ||
It's just completely abolishing that. | ||
It's just establishing a parallel system that is completely controlled by corporate money. | ||
And that is outrageous and should not be allowed. | ||
Otherwise, like, why do we even have a court system if you can just, you know, put a little clause, little asterisk in the, you know. | ||
The contract they have to sign that says we're just avoiding the American courts where fairness is the rule in favor of our courts that we pay for and always rely on us. | ||
I mean, this is just absurd that this is allowed to continue like this. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
And it's the pattern in America is if you want to rule the world, you've got to control the laws and you've got to control the money. | ||
And more and more, the more you learn about sort of the deep state, the various aspects of the deep state, globalists, whatever you want to call them, the breakaway civilization. | ||
This is a group of extremely powerful people, CEOs, billionaires, you know, these multinational corporations, the intelligence agencies, that are all operating on this sort of global perspective that does not play by the same rules as all the rest of us little guys. | ||
And more and more, this is a creep where they're buying up more of our regular lives, buying up more of our regular industry, more of our single-family homes, more of our public utilities and public services. | ||
And it's a silent flipping of the entire world into a very dystopian. | ||
We have rights on paper, but already today, in more than half the things a regular American does with their day, they're actually operating in an environment where there is a contract that they have signed in order to be in that gym or be in that hospital or be in that waiting room, whatever it is, where that contract says you do not have the rights you think you have if anything goes wrong. | ||
And as private equity grows, as corporate ownership grows, and BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street's sort of collective ownership state grows, more and more the way that capitalism was designed and the story we're told about capitalism is just a facade covering up an oligarchical system. | ||
A hundred percent. | ||
Very well said. | ||
And it reminds me, there's connections to everything. | ||
There's connections to the buying up of private houses and renting them out so nobody's going to own a home anymore. | ||
Just right alongside the World Economic Forum, Great Reset, you'll own nothing, you'll have no privacy. | ||
I mean, these aren't things that they're asking you to accept. | ||
These are things they're doing to you whether you like it or not. | ||
And it reminds me of the lockstep document that everybody... | ||
Talked about during COVID because it seemed to lay out exactly what would happen under COVID. | ||
And an important part of that document is they have a quadrant. | ||
They rate outcomes based on things like adaptability and whatever else. | ||
But essentially, what you come away with is the understanding that like... | ||
It's all about control to them and having a bunch of small businesses owned by independent people. | ||
Yeah, adaptive capacity versus political alignment. | ||
So, you know, in their ultimate world, everything is controlled by a few, a very small number of massive corporations. | ||
And they tell you, like, that's what they want. | ||
And the further you get away from centralized monopolistic control, the worse it is for the people in power, the globalists who are puppeteering all of this. | ||
It's a lot harder to implement lockdown measures with a whole bunch of small businesses all owned by individuals. | ||
You got to get them all on board. | ||
Some aren't going to go along with it. | ||
Some are. | ||
That's messy. | ||
Instead, if you have Walmart as a corporation, then that corporate office sends down an order in 10,000 stores all in lockstep, do whatever you want it to do. | ||
So at the end of the day, it really all is about control and consolidation brings about that control. | ||
So, you know, this isn't absolutely this isn't a standalone thing that's happening. | ||
It's indicative or it's. | ||
It's sort of horrifying when you really sit back and absorb it all. | ||
While you point out the scope of what's going on here, the way I look at it is there are some things, like what we're talking about today, that are actually moving the needle towards this global control, as in the technocratic kind of creep of our government. | ||
and of our monetary system and of our surveillance systems, that's real. | ||
And that is very much taking away our rights. | ||
The creep of this monetary world where private equity and corporations are buying up more and more and taking away more and more of our rights. | ||
That's real. | ||
And they don't want us paying attention to any of those real power levers that they're wielding. | ||
They would much rather distract us with all sorts of culture wars. | ||
They would wage the information war, the info war, in front to distract us with all these salacious topics that do matter often in some regards. | ||
But ultimately serve as a smokescreen of sludge that we have to wade through to get to the real stuff they're doing quietly behind the scenes that don't even require us to acknowledge them, don't require us to vote on them, don't require us to ever accept that this is the direction of our country going. | ||
But instead, they can just do it in the shadows behind the smokescreen of all the bullshit that they flood our airwaves with every day. | ||
That's the Infowar. | ||
And that's really what it's about, is wading through it and getting to the clear news, tomorrow's news today, right? | ||
100%. | ||
And that's exactly why I wanted to have you on, why we're going to have Tiffany Cianci on either this week or next week. | ||
We're going to try to work with her and bring her on because, again, this is something where I think if people were aware of it, speaking out against it, call your congressmen, call your senators, make sure they're aware of this. | ||
This is something where the government has not just an ability but an obligation to step in and protect this. | ||
The average citizen against the exploitation by these corporations. | ||
And again, just to give you an idea, since 2020, private equity funds have grown nearly 78% from $4.5 trillion to $8 trillion last year. | ||
They've purchased companies in nearly every sector of the economy, including radiology practices, nursing homes, newspapers, grocery stores, laying off hundreds of thousands of workers and ruining thousands of companies in the process. | ||
I hate to say it, the person I'm quoting there is Elizabeth Warren. | ||
So it's like, why does the left have a monopoly on this? | ||
Why are they the only ones seeking to remedy this very, very big problem? | ||
If anybody, it should be the MAGA Americans, the people who actually want there to be small businesses and independents in this country and have a rule of law that the courts have to follow. | ||
We should be the ones on the forefront of this, and I hope our audience takes up the torch and helps to lead this march. | ||
Yeah, well, thanks to people like you, Harrison. | ||
Thanks to people like Tiffany Sianci. | ||
They're about to be. | ||
This is no longer partisan. | ||
All we needed to do was find it, start talking about it, and fortunately now it is reaching big enough airwaves that all Americans can learn about this. | ||
This is an American value. | ||
This is not a leftist or a right thing. | ||
This is everyone being affected, and if you believe in free speech, if you believe in the Constitution, if you believe in capitalism, if you believe in the rights of the little guy or the worker, the common blue-collar people. | ||
This is that fight, and they're already winning it in all of these secret courts, in all of these secret filings, in all of this creep that is happening behind the scenes. | ||
And it's time to not let Elizabeth Warren be the leader of the conversation, because she ultimately is doing it for partisan reasons. | ||
She's doing it for her own spin-doctored reasoning. | ||
We are the people, and it's time for us to get loud, because there is a lot that we can do. | ||
There's a lot of pressure we can apply, and it would not be hard to move the needle a very big amount just by waking up and talking about it and starting to get loud. | ||
It is an information war, and this is one front that we need to battle with all we've got. | ||
Ian Carroll, thank you so much for joining us. | ||
Follow Ian on X, at Ian Carroll Show, on YouTube at Ian Carroll Show, the website, CancelIanCarroll.com. | ||
And, of course, you're on with Candace this week, or you're hosting for her while she's out on maternity leave. | ||
Congratulations to her, by the way. | ||
How can people find that quickly? | ||
You can follow along with Candace's show and the Candace Owens show is on YouTube. | ||
I don't actually know the handle off the top of my head. | ||
Candace show on YouTube. | ||
Thank you so much, Ian. | ||
That's going to be it for us. | ||
Stay tuned. | ||
Thanks a lot, Harrison. | ||
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