Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
It's a genocide that's taking place that you people don't want to write about. | ||
Farmers are being killed. | ||
But whether they're white or black makes no difference to me. | ||
But white farmers are being brutally killed and their land is being confiscated in South Africa. | ||
And the newspapers and the media. | ||
Television media doesn't even talk about it. | ||
unidentified
|
Dero Ramaphosa brought his best diplomatic self to this meeting, but nothing could have prepared him for this multimedia ambush. | |
President Trump ambushing the president of South Africa. | ||
President Trump is being accused of conducting something of a diplomatic ambush of South Africa's president in the Oval Office. | ||
President Trump orchestrated another Oval Office ambush. | ||
Ambush. | ||
Ambush. | ||
Felt like an ambush in there. | ||
Ambush. | ||
Almost everything that President Trump said in the Oval Office is not true, was inaccurate, has been repeatedly debunked. | ||
People are going to occupy land. | ||
We require no permission from you, from the president, from no one. | ||
A revolution demands that at some point there must be killing because the killing is part Turn the lights down and just put this on. | ||
right behind you. | ||
unidentified
|
Shoot the king! | |
Kill the poor, the farmer! | ||
Mr. President, the Pentagon announced that it would be accepting a Qatari jet to be used as Air Force One. | ||
You're a disgrace. | ||
No more questions, Mr. Bader. | ||
Trump throwing the truth in front of the South African genocidal black racist president and to the corporate media that tries to cover all this up, throwing it directly in their faces and the corporate media pivots to Unbelievable. | ||
unidentified
|
My name is Johannes Achenbach. | |
I am a seventh-generation farmer from South Africa. | ||
I have been a victim of an attack myself. | ||
Luckily, by the grace of God, I have courted it. | ||
I have extended family that have, many of them, suffered attacks. | ||
I know people that have worked for us, that are now living in Australia, that outright, they were attempted to be assassinated by the people, by the local black community in Petersburg. | ||
And I also know that their farm eventually was taken by the community. | ||
This was not done by the government. | ||
This was done by a mob And we outright saw tonight Ramaphosa denying that he has ever seen any evidence of this happening. | ||
So he was willing to lie to the most powerful government in the world to see Donald Trump challenge the lies. | ||
That have been spewed on my people. | ||
I want to say thank you to the American people. | ||
I want to say thank you to Mr. Trump because you did a great thing for my people. | ||
And from the bottom of my heart, every victim, I was seven year old when I saw our neighbor's daughter get slaughtered like an animal. | ||
They skinned her alive in front of her father. | ||
The president showed a video that he said showed more than a thousand burial sites of white South Africans. | ||
And he said were murdered. | ||
We know that that was not true. | ||
The video shows crosses that represent the dead bodies of people who were racially persecuted by their government. | ||
In fact, the caption from the Associated Press is, Once the informant is hooked, he will expose the weaknesses of the farmer to the gang. | ||
And the biggest weakness of any farmer is his wife and children. | ||
You're going to kill your wife or you're going to rape your wife in front of you and kill her. | ||
And rape even your children, the small one. | ||
Rape the small one? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And how small a child would they rape? | ||
Even at the age of two years. | ||
Very young. | ||
Very young. | ||
So that he can feel a pain and say, oh, guys, let me give you the money. | ||
You go, I save my children. | ||
South African president, Ramaphosa, paid a visit to the White House yesterday, which turned into... | ||
unidentified
|
*laughter* | |
Yeah. | ||
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 back. | ||
Get everybody in the stuff together. | ||
Okay, three, two, one. | ||
Let's jam. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Coming to you live this Friday morning from the InfoWars headquarters here in Austin, Texas. | ||
Big, big, big news day today. | ||
Should I say the last 24 hours has been pretty huge. | ||
It's been pretty gigantic. | ||
We got a whole variety of things to talk about. | ||
I won't be taking your calls throughout the show today. | ||
We've got a lot of health news. | ||
We've got a lot of international news. | ||
We've got big fat U.S. congressmen wanting to bomb Gaza with a nuke. | ||
We'll talk, we'll, we'll break that down for you. | ||
We continue to, uh, well, I mean the, the killing of the Israeli diplomat slash Christian I don't actually know what the deal is, but it's still the top story across headlines today. | ||
And we'll break that down a little bit more as well. | ||
So like I said, we just have a lot to get into today and a lot of videos to show you and a lot of calls to take. | ||
So we're going to get into it like we always do with your daily dispatch. | ||
Here it is, folks, your daily dispatch for Friday, the 23rd of May, 2025. | ||
Trump recommends 50% tariff on European Union starting on June 1st. | ||
On Friday morning, President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social his proposal to impose a 50% tariff on imports from the European Union effective June 1st, 2025. | ||
Trump issued the tariff threat. | ||
Due to stalled trade negotiations inside of the EU's trade barriers, taxes, and a $250 billion annual trade deficit with the U.S., Trump also targeted Apple, demanding its iPhones be sold in the U.S., be built domestically, or face a 25% tariff, criticizing manufacturing in China and India. | ||
Following the announcement, European stock indexes dropped sharply, with Germany's DAX down 2.6%. | ||
CAC down 2.8%. | ||
Yeah, France's CAC is down. | ||
London's FTSE down 1.3% and U.S. futures also falling. | ||
The tariff proposal signals a renewed escalation in U.S.-EU trade tensions and may alter global markets as ongoing trade talks between officials scheduled after the post. | ||
And I think Trump is – yeah, I think he's – In fact, the CEO of Amazon came out yesterday and said, yeah, all the tariffs have had absolutely no effect whatsoever on consumer prices or consumer demand. | ||
So all of the fear-mongering, I guess, was wrong and lies. | ||
So we're going to see more of this, I suppose. | ||
Really on the warpath here in a lot of different ways. | ||
Meanwhile, FTC opens investigation into far-left media matters and its coordinated attack on X and its advertisers. | ||
The Federal Trade Commission launched an investigation into Media Matters for America, the far-left group that targets conservative media outlets and personalities to put them out of business. | ||
Media Matters for America is funded by top Democrat megadonors who value their work. | ||
Soros-funded media matters and several leftist groups, like Sleeping Giants run by Matt Rivets, have been harassing American corporations for years to quit advertising with conservative platforms, websites, and businesses. | ||
The Gateway Pundit has been a prime target by these leftist groups and government agencies. | ||
In May 2022, CNN published a hit piece on Elon Musk and Twitter. | ||
The article was the far-left's attempt to sway advertisers from posting ads on Twitter. | ||
Again, we've covered this a lot. | ||
There's a difference between a boycott, which is a ground up choice of consumers to avoid a particular product to make a political point, very different than the essentially legalized blackmail and extortion that happens when these coordinated groups get together to deny funding to a corporation until they bend their knee and do what they want. | ||
And I would say that... | ||
As we know, as soon as Elon Musk was even really interested in purchasing Twitter, and especially after he did so, there were a variety of completely fraudulent and baseless investigations launched from A whole host of governmental entities against all of his businesses, none of which came to anything or achieved anything against him because they were all fraudulent and baseless. | ||
But that's the way the left deals or wields political power. | ||
So that'll be interesting. | ||
The FTC may end up investigating itself in its own cooperation with the likes of Media Matters as they attempted to coordinate. | ||
Corporate sabotage against Elon Musk for not kowtowing to their censorship demands. | ||
Meanwhile, Harvard sues Trump administration for blocking universities' ability to enroll international students. | ||
Harvard University has sued the Trump administration over Donald Trump's decision to revoke the Ivy League school's ability to enroll international students. | ||
Reuters reports that in a complaint filed in Boston federal court, Harvard called the revocation a blatant violation of the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment and other federal laws. | ||
It also says that the revocation had an immediate and devastating effect on the university and more than 7,000 visa holders. | ||
The administration's severe escalation in its week-long showdown with Harvard would force more than 6,000 international students currently enrolled there to transfer to other universities or lose their legal status, according to the Department of Homeland Security. | ||
An extract from the Harvard complaint reads, With a stroke of a pen, the government has sought to erase a quarter of Harvard's student body international students who contribute significantly to the university and its mission. | ||
It is the latest act by the government in clear retaliation for Harvard exercising its First Amendment rights to reject government's demands to control Harvard's governance, curriculum, and the ideology of its faculty and students. | ||
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem yesterday ordered the termination of Harvard's student and exchange visitor program certification, effective with the 2025-2026 academic year, accusing the university of, quote, fostering violence, anti-Semitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party. | ||
I do think this is a pretty outrageous act of overreach by the federal government. | ||
But what isn't these days? | ||
Meanwhile, GOP congressman calls for nuking Gaza like the U.S. did to Japan. | ||
Randy Fine, big fat Jewish supremacist Randy Fine, calls for nuking Gaza in an interview on Fox News. | ||
The fact of the matter is the Palestinian cause is an evil one, he says, following last night's deadly shooting of two Israeli embassy staffers who were outside the Capitol Jewish Museum in Washington where an American Jewish Committee event was being held. | ||
The only end of the conflict in Gaza is complete and total surrender by those who support Muslim terror. | ||
In World War II, we did not negotiate a surrender with the Nazis. | ||
We did not negotiate a surrender with the Japanese. | ||
We nuked the Japanese twice in order to get unconditional surrender, he says. | ||
That needs to be the same here. | ||
There's something deeply, deeply wrong with the culture and it needs to be defeated. | ||
Yeah, we'll get into that. | ||
Yeah, we'll show you that clip and we'll get into it. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, I saw... | |
Apparently the clips have not been dropped in. | ||
But we'll show you that one a little bit later on. | ||
And again, I just, I can't tell you how... | ||
There's something deeply wrong with Randy Fine. | ||
And not just physically. | ||
Not just physically, although that condition may... | ||
Meanwhile, Maha Commission releases a report on childhood chronic disease. | ||
Make America Healthy Again Commission released a new detailed report outlining its priorities to address the crisis of chronic health disease amongst children, which include clinical trials for nutrition and measures to improve the safety of vaccine and medication for children. | ||
The new report says chronic disease is being driven by increasing consumption of ultra-processed foods, exposure to toxic chemicals, sedentary lifestyles, and over-prescription of medications. | ||
The report states that the commission's goal... | ||
The CDC says that four out of ten children in the United States have at least one chronic health condition such as asthma. | ||
About 75% of American youth are not eligible for military service primarily due to obesity and poor fitness according to the Department of Defense. | ||
The report concludes with 10 recommendations, which include new long-term nutritional trials compared to the effects of whole food and ultra-processed food diets and new systems to monitor the safety of vaccines and medication. | ||
Other recommendations include calls to investigate the safety of food additives deemed generally recognized as safe by the FDA, the creation of a task force to investigate patterns of chronic disease using AI, and increased investment in non-animal testing models for drug and food additives. | ||
We'll talk a little bit more about the Make America Healthy Again initiative. | ||
Just other, you know, health facts that have been revealed recently. | ||
It really is astonishing how rapidly all this has taken place. | ||
I just hope the pushback is not too little too late. | ||
After all, even as early as the, or as late as the late 90s, this was... | ||
The health of the American people, especially American youth, has been very deliberately destroyed. | ||
Utterly, completely destroyed. | ||
But so has most other aspects of our lives. | ||
So it's not exactly a surprise. | ||
It's in line with the generalized campaign to Destroy America from within. | ||
That's your Daily Dispatch. | ||
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Like I said, I got just a huge variety of news, including things like the Texas legislature banning all THC products for some reason. | ||
For some reason. | ||
And we will get into like what actually they're doing and why they say they're doing it and what could be behind it. | ||
To me, it's less even about the. | ||
It's about this broken system that we're in where it's like, what are they doing? | ||
What is Congress doing? | ||
What are the state legislators doing? | ||
I can't even fathom. | ||
Like, what would compel them to do this? | ||
And a lot of people have a lot of different issues with this, but essentially it's like an $8 billion industry in Texas. | ||
It's been legal, so people have built careers, built jobs, founded businesses off this product. | ||
You're going to destroy millions of livelihoods. | ||
There's already probably millions of people. | ||
Who use THC products, they're all going to be felons all of a sudden, overnight. | ||
People who use THC-derived compounds to deal with stress or anxiety or, you know, physical ailments. | ||
I guess we cut off from that and we'll have to go to the pharmaceutical abominations instead. | ||
And, I mean, that can be the only, you know, force driving this. | ||
I genuinely don't. | ||
See anybody else calling for ending this practice. | ||
If you don't like the stuff, you don't have to buy it. | ||
And it not being in stores and regulated is not going to prevent anybody who wants it from getting it. | ||
So what are they doing? | ||
Which is, what are they doing? | ||
How many problems does Texas have that go totally unaddressed only for Congress to spend their valuable time in session? | ||
Doing things that just nobody wants and is not good for anybody. | ||
It's just time and time again, the frustration is reinforced with the fact that Congress can do stuff. | ||
They can do a lot of stuff. | ||
They can do incredible stuff. | ||
I mean, the THC issue is a pretty good one. | ||
If they want to, with the stroke of a pen, end an entire industry, they can just do it. | ||
They can just shut down stores and... | ||
They can do it. | ||
They have this incredible power and they're willing to use it just never for the benefit of the American people. | ||
Just never. | ||
Just not once. | ||
They just come up with insane things that nobody's asking for and they do it. | ||
And they just, you know. | ||
Shove their laws down your throat, but then you're just like begging. | ||
You're like, can we just, can I have my libraries back? | ||
Can I send my kid to public school without them becoming trans? | ||
Can I have a DMV that's not overflowing with foreigners? | ||
Can we expel some of the invaders that have swamped all of our systems? | ||
Could we do literally anything for us? | ||
Can just anything happen? | ||
In favor of us, for our benefit, just absolutely anything. | ||
And it really, when you really start thinking about how messed up everything is, it just means we need a full-fledged revolution one of these days. | ||
One of these days, I think, a full-fledged 1776 slash, I don't know. | ||
Great Awakening slash Reformation. | ||
We need a spiritual, political tumble dry session. | ||
Everything just needs to be shaken up, destroyed, taken to zero, and rebuilt because we're working with a legacy system that is not fit for purpose anymore. | ||
And this is one of the things that... | ||
We'll go to clip number nine here. | ||
This interview from Elon Musk had a couple parts that went pretty viral over this week. | ||
Let's go to clip number nine where Elon Musk is asked about his continuing participation in the political realm. | ||
And he's not into it anymore. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
I think in terms of political spending, I'm going to do a lot less in the future. | ||
unidentified
|
And why is that? | |
I think I've done enough. | ||
unidentified
|
Is it because of blowback? | |
Well, if I see a reason to do political spending in the future, I will do it. | ||
I don't currently see a reason. | ||
What about... | ||
She asks about blowback. | ||
He sort of ignores her question. | ||
I don't think it is about blowback. | ||
I think it's about the frustration that Elon Musk has felt over the inaction of the Republican Congress and Senate and the inability to actually get anything positive done in Washington, | ||
D.C. I mean, after all, again, I mean, Elon Musk is sort of, I guess he's learning What all of us Republicans but actual patriots have learned over the last couple of decades, which is like the people in office don't care about helping you. | ||
And it doesn't matter how much you help them. | ||
Elon Musk, like Donald Trump, has just taken an infinite number of slings and arrows. | ||
He has donated ungodly amounts of money. | ||
He has almost single-handedly wrestled control of the country away from the Democrats by doing things like focusing on Pennsylvania. | ||
I mean, Pennsylvania was still close. | ||
It's pretty likely that we would not have won Pennsylvania if Elon Musk had not hyper-focused on that state. | ||
And gotten out the vote and, you know, contributed so much there. | ||
It means Trump wouldn't have gotten elected, which means the downstream election of all the Republican congressmen and senators would have been at risk. | ||
And it's like you can give everything. | ||
You can give them billions of dollars and your reputation be destroyed and your company's stocks get tanked because of your participation. | ||
You can literally Fight with everything you've got. | ||
Be demonized by the media. | ||
Be hunted by extremists. | ||
And then you win. | ||
Against all odds, you succeed. | ||
You deliver victory for them. | ||
And they just do nothing. | ||
Just do absolutely nothing. | ||
They capitulated on like two-thirds of the Democrats' demands for the big, beautiful bill passed yesterday. | ||
Even though we have the House, even though we have the Senate, even though we have the presidency, they will not do what you ask of them or what will benefit you. | ||
And it's incredibly frustrating, and I really don't blame Elon Musk for doing that. | ||
The issue is, you know, Elon Musk said, or it was said about him, that he'd be the right-wing's George Soros. | ||
One thing you'll notice is that George Soros focuses a lot on local politics. | ||
I hope Elon Musk continues supporting political causes. | ||
He's like, if I think there's a cause, I'll contribute. | ||
And it's like, well, before you said you were contributing, you said you were joining up with MAGA because the world is ending. | ||
Because, like, you want to get to be a multi-planetary species before some cataclysmic event ends life on Earth in order to continue human existence forever into the future and to combat the, you know, birthrate crisis and all this. | ||
None of that stuff's been solved. | ||
That stuff is all existentially important and has not been fixed. | ||
So I hope he's still participating. | ||
I hope he's still involved in the fight for humanity. | ||
I hope he does it in a decentralized way. | ||
I hope he does it in a more thoughtful and creative way because trying to work with the actual people in office is a fool's errand because they're useless morons. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
Like I said, we just have an infinite amount of news to get to today. | ||
I just want to say, and I don't know who this message needs to get to, but like, I'm very, I personally, I'm very disappointed to hear Elon Musk say that he's not going to contribute to political causes anymore. | ||
When The The process that we're fighting back against of the degradation and dismantling of American society has happened over decades. | ||
Elon Musk gets involved for like a year fighting back and then it's just like, bah, I give up. | ||
It's like, dude, did you not know this was going to be a long-term operation? | ||
Did you not know that victory wasn't going to come overnight? | ||
And that achieving Donald Trump's election was a necessary stopgap measure to prevent a totally hopeless situation from developing. | ||
Four years of Kamala Harris would have been the end of America in a very, very real, legitimate way. | ||
But that's what it was. | ||
It was a stopgap measure. | ||
It was necessary to get at the time. | ||
You had to stop the progress by getting... | ||
That was never a solution. | ||
That was never a be-all, end-all. | ||
It's fixed from here on out. | ||
Now, the Trump administration and obviously Congress and Senate could be doing a hell of a lot more to set us on the right track. | ||
unidentified
|
But I just, it just... | |
It's like for so long, for years and years and years. | ||
The right has had to sit by and watch as the left just receives billions upon billions upon billions of dollars from all sorts of left-wing activists. | ||
George Soros is just the sort of symbol of that, but he was far from the only one. | ||
And then for once, for the first time in my life, There's a prominent billionaire, he happens to be the richest man in the world, laying down his money to fight against the dispossession of America, to fight against the insanity that is consuming us. | ||
And it's a little disappointing to see that guy after a single year. | ||
Nah, I'm done. | ||
I'm done with that. | ||
It's like, alright, dude, what the hell. | ||
It's like, what the hell? | ||
Why? | ||
Why? | ||
Why not peel off just one of your hundreds of billions of dollars? | ||
Just one. | ||
If you want to go up against George Soros, peel off 20, but I think one. | ||
I think one billion dollar foundation. | ||
Would have so much more effect than all of the political contributions you could make combined. | ||
Create a foundation that is analogous to the George Soros Open Society Foundation. | ||
Call it something like the Team America Foundation. | ||
And hand control over somebody like Alex Jones. | ||
Or hell, Roger Stone. | ||
or Steve Bannon, any of these guys who have proven they know how to, you know, And that's just the seed money. | ||
Just deposit the seed money into the foundation. | ||
And again, a billion dollars is an unimaginable amount of money. | ||
And you could seed little foundation offices in every city in America. | ||
And they can create their own foundations and apply for grants. | ||
We can do what the left did over the last several decades. | ||
Only you can do it for patriotism and reasonableness and capitalism and good things rather than destructive ends. | ||
You could fund DAs that will punish crime rather than let criminals out. | ||
You could install city councils and mayors. | ||
And focus on local issues to have tangible, positive benefits to the people on the ground. | ||
You can create educational systems, camps to teach kids about starting their own businesses, being entrepreneurs or scientists. | ||
You'd have such a profound impact by focusing on the cultural and the local and the media landscape. | ||
You could fund movies. | ||
Hell, you can make them with AI and produce them for dirt cheap. | ||
Movies that are entertaining and compelling and have a good message. | ||
And you can sway billions of people away from the deconstructionist mindset. | ||
You can build things up from the ground up. | ||
It's just like, is it even quantifiable? | ||
The failure that the current Republican Congress is experiencing. | ||
They had the richest man in the world willing to put everything on the line to help them and they can't even write a bill to codify the work that Doge did. | ||
They are squandering everything and it's It's existential is what it is. | ||
It's existential. | ||
And again, do you want to know what the left was engaged in? | ||
I didn't realize how long this clip was, so I don't even know if we'll go to it. | ||
We can go to clip number six, but the title is really what the important part is. | ||
In the 76-day period between Donald Trump winning the election and Biden leaving office, $93 billion was disgorged from government coffers into organizations that didn't even have financials. | ||
$93 billion. | ||
Again, I don't have a way to even express how much money that is. | ||
$93 billion given out to leftist organizations by these people. | ||
Let's go to clip number six. | ||
I don't know how long we'll be able to keep this going, but $93 billion. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
Mr. Secretary, I want to go back to some of your earlier testimony and be sure I heard it correctly. | ||
The 76-day period you're talking about, that's the period between the time that President Trump was elected and President Biden left office, is that right? | ||
unidentified
|
That is correct. | |
And during that short period of time, 76 days, how much taxpayer money went out the door of the Department of Energy? | ||
unidentified
|
From the loan program office in loans and commitments, $93 billion. | |
Well over twice as much as in the previous 15 years. | ||
How do you vet and do due diligence on a loan in 76 days? | ||
One loan, much less 90%. | ||
How do you do it? | ||
unidentified
|
I think it's probably pretty clear it wasn't done in many cases. | |
As I mentioned, I'm told I'm holding back clearly in place stuff. | ||
There is lots of funds that have gone out the door and commitments that were made from businesses that provided no business plan. | ||
No numbers about their own financial solvency or how this project actually works. | ||
So you're telling me that the Department of Energy, in the 76-day period, before their boss was going to leave office, gave or loaned money to entities that had no business plan? | ||
unidentified
|
Correct. | |
No financials? | ||
unidentified
|
Correct. | |
A number of those were before the 76-day period as well. | ||
I've come in with great concern about how this institution, this great American institution has been run and how American taxpayer money has been handled. | ||
I'm sorry everyone's upset that we're taking some time to do it. | ||
But what we've seen, what the record shows is that... | ||
Could it be that a lot of people say you haven't returned your calls? | ||
Could it be that... | ||
Could that be a possibility? | ||
unidentified
|
I'm not aware of that. | |
You know, I give my cell phone number to any senator that wants it, and I return my calls. | ||
I mean, has your department gone dark? | ||
Somebody said your department's gone dark. | ||
Is it dark over there? | ||
unidentified
|
It doesn't look dark behind me. | |
I don't see any of you sitting on your hands. | ||
Somebody made that charge. | ||
I see everybody's hands. | ||
Let me ask you something else, Mr. Secretary. | ||
Does anybody ever come to the Department of Energy to get some of this free money and lie to you? | ||
unidentified
|
Um... | |
I have not experienced that, but I think it's a reasonable assumption that that has happened. | ||
Does anybody ever come to you, or is it conceivable that some of these folks that heard about this free money came to you with a half-baked idea? | ||
unidentified
|
I think it's very conceivable. | |
In fact, I've seen such plans that were half-baked would be charitable. | ||
You've seen plans that didn't have a business plan, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Correct. | |
A promise to develop one, to find a location. | ||
Just give me the money and I'll develop the plan later. | ||
unidentified
|
Correct. | |
And now, you're going back through, not money that's already been contracted, but you're going back through and checking each one of these loans and these grants to make sure there was no stealing, aren't you? | ||
unidentified
|
We are. | |
We are. | ||
And you make sure there was no incompetence, aren't you? | ||
Is that correct? | ||
unidentified
|
We're looking at that, and yeah, my blood pressure is rising right now just thinking about what we have seen and what did happen at the department. | |
And you're going to tell some of these boondoggles no, aren't you? | ||
unidentified
|
That's correct. | |
And they're going to be upset, aren't they? | ||
unidentified
|
That's correct. | |
And they ought to be upset, shouldn't they? | ||
unidentified
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I don't think they should be upset. | |
I think they should be ashamed. | ||
I am... | ||
But I want to be sure I understood. | ||
The people running the Department of Energy for President Biden's administration shoveled $93 billion, not million, $93 billion out the door. | ||
In 76 days, and it just happened to be the time between when President Trump was elected and President Biden, their boss, was leaving. | ||
Is that right? | ||
unidentified
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It is correct and distasteful. | |
Confidence undermining. | ||
My God. | ||
Look, I hope you take whatever time you need. | ||
To go through all of these projects penny by penny. | ||
I mean, I've heard this testimony today. | ||
Well, it'll cost jobs in my state. | ||
If somebody steals $50 million and goes and spends the money in their state, that's going to stimulate the economy, isn't it? | ||
unidentified
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Yes, it will. | |
But that's still stealing, isn't it? | ||
And it's still illegal, isn't it? | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
I mean, they were spending money at the Department of Energy like it was ditch water. | ||
Their budget went from $60 billion to $160 billion since fiscal year 2021. | ||
It just sounds to me like there were a lot of people coming to the Department of Energy. | ||
Who had all four feet and their snout in the trough. | ||
And I hope you'll turn down the boondoggles and refer the thieves to the Department of Justice. | ||
And that is what needs to happen. | ||
unidentified
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Senator, the one complication in there too is mixed in there. | |
That is the situation. | ||
Yeah, by the way, that was the DOE. | ||
That wasn't even the EPA. | ||
And the EPA administer is vowing to recover $20 billion. | ||
And that was the undercover video saying we're throwing gold bars off the Titanic. | ||
Biden inks billion-dollar climate deals to foil Trump rollbacks. | ||
And when you really think about what's going on, everything being revealed these days, I mean, it's clear. | ||
The Biden administration was the greatest act of criminality the world has maybe ever seen. | ||
I mean from what's coming out about the auto-pin scandal that Biden was completely unaware of the things that his signature was being affixed to and internal leaks saying that people were paid immense amounts of money for things like pardons. | ||
The fact that they covered up his health decline or horrible state from the beginning in cooperation with the media. | ||
The fact that the reality about the COVID vaccine is coming out now. | ||
And I've got studies that I'll tell you about today showing that in places like the Czech Republic, they had a, I believe, 30% drop in fertility following the rollout of the vaccine. | ||
Joe Rogan went over the numbers yesterday out of VAERS, showing that more people died from the vaccine than soldiers killed in, like, Vietnam and World War I combined. | ||
$93 billion from one government organization, $20 billion robbed from another. | ||
immigration crime that we lived through during those four years that now apparently we can't undo because of the judicial coup that's going on while we're simultaneously driving towards World War III in a number of different theaters. | ||
And it's just like, yeah, yeah, we're going to need more than... | ||
We need to be rounding these people up. | ||
We need to be imprisoning them. | ||
We need to be clawing back that money with everything we've got. | ||
I mean, just completely fraudulent. | ||
And they do it under the color of law, right? | ||
They do it under processes that are Legal in only the strictest interpretation. | ||
Or they technically fulfill the obligations as laid out in receiving money from the Department of Energy. | ||
I mean, we've explained the process over and over, but it's very simple. | ||
Somebody in the Department of Energy says, hey, we've got to spend as much money as possible. | ||
We've got to do as much as we can to stop Trump. | ||
From undoing this stuff. | ||
We got 76 days. | ||
So they call their friends up and go, hey, I got a billion dollars with your name on it. | ||
Create an LLC. | ||
They go and they create an LLC. | ||
They spend 300 bucks and they just receive a cash injection of like a hundred million dollars. | ||
Just here you go. | ||
Yeah, say you have a LLC. | ||
Say you do like, I don't know, solar panels or whatever. | ||
They don't have to prove that they can do it. | ||
They don't have to provide any return on investment. | ||
There is no capitalistic market corrections or limitations taking place where if a normal private lender would want to return on their investment and would therefore have to only invest in things that could make money, this is just dispensing your money. | ||
By the hundreds of billions of dollars to leftist organizations. | ||
I mean... | ||
And, you know, so much of it lies, is predicated on these lies that the mainstream media tells. | ||
Mainstream media really is the They're the ones that covered up Biden's incapacity. | ||
And yet, they are now apparently taking credit for exposing it and acting like they were the victims in all of this. | ||
And I have an interesting couple of things to show you that I think illustrate how the leftist mind works in this regard. | ||
We'll go first to clip number eight here. | ||
This is Jake Tapper. | ||
He sort of let slip what the real purpose of this book is. | ||
It's not a mea culpa. | ||
It's not a come-to-Jesus moment. | ||
It's not an introspective opportunity for the mainstream media to ask how they got it so wrong or to point the finger at the people carrying out the cover-up from on high. | ||
No, it's about setting the stage for questioning Donald Trump's fitness in office. | ||
These people cannot do anything, honestly. | ||
It really is a pathology with these people. | ||
Even when they write a whole book talking about how wrong they were and about how they covered up for Joe Biden for political advantage. | ||
The whole reason they're actually writing the book, the underlying ulterior motive. | ||
Is that they're actually just preparing to use it as a weapon against Trump because they haven't learned a lesson. | ||
They've just altered their strategy to achieve the same evil ends. | ||
Let's go to clip number eight now. | ||
Transparency by leaders when it comes to their health. | ||
And I would argue that some of the skepticism we've heard from Democrats, Republicans, and doctors, I have no idea what's true, what's not true. | ||
All I can say is, like, that lack of confidence in the transparency that's being offered didn't come out of nowhere. | ||
And three, like, this, or C, I'm really bad at that. | ||
And C, this applies to Donald Trump, too, and every future president. | ||
Donald Trump has released, like, nothing about his health. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
And while there aren't the questions of acuity, there are certainly questions about his health. | ||
Yeah. | ||
We can't have this as a country. | ||
We have such a powerful executive branch, and at this stage, such an unco-equal legislative branch, and such weak political parties. | ||
We're really racing towards a very dangerous situation. | ||
What if there had been that 2 a.m. phone call for Joe Biden? | ||
unidentified
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I think readers' offices can sometimes make this mistake, or audiences can sometimes make the mistake of assuming that reporting Yeah, apparently not. | |
But apparently not. | ||
Apparently the point is to set the stage for questioning Donald Trump's health and saying, well, we're just we're learning our lessons from Joe Biden. | ||
We can't just let Trump get away with being healthy and obviously evidently. | ||
Capable and sharp. | ||
We have to question it, and you're just doing our due diligence, what we learned about Joe Biden. | ||
Now, Harry Sisson, during the campaign, wrote this, and I think this really illustrates exactly how these people think. | ||
He said, remember that the attacks on Biden's age are manufactured. | ||
They're made up by Republicans to scare people. | ||
No world leaders, no White House staff, nobody that's worked with Biden, no aides, nobody has ever said Biden's age is an issue. | ||
Don't fall for it. | ||
A number of different interesting rhetorical devices being deployed here, right? | ||
Questioning the legitimacy of the claims made by Republicans. | ||
They aren't actually concerned about Biden's age. | ||
They're just trying to scare you. | ||
Because nothing Republicans ever do could be legitimate, even when they're proven incontrovertibly correct. | ||
They'll still try to undermine those claims. | ||
But importantly, it's the appeal to authority as if we needed a, what did he say, a White House staff member or a world leader or one of Biden's aides to tell us that he was incompetent. | ||
As if we can't see it for ourselves. | ||
As if we need an authority to dictate. | ||
Our view of reality for us. | ||
No, we can just see that Biden was collapsing. | ||
And then we talked about it. | ||
It's not that complicated. | ||
unidentified
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There will be three types of emergencies in the next five years. | |
Most likely first. | ||
Cyber attack on financial or energy systems. | ||
Estimated timeline. | ||
Quarter 4, 2025. | ||
Quarter 1, 2026. | ||
Why this comes first? | ||
Cyber Polygon was run in 2020 and 2021 by WEF and Russia's largest bank, CERBank, simulating a global cyber pandemic. | ||
You notice that Russia plays in the same game? | ||
It's part of the same game? | ||
The IMF, World Bank and BIS have accelerated CBDC infrastructure but need a crisis to justify full adoption. | ||
The global debt bubble, especially in the US and EU, is approaching unsustainable levels. | ||
They need a reset event. | ||
The narrative is already being set. | ||
Klaus Schwab warned of a COVID-like cyber attack that would shut down critical infrastructure. | ||
What it would look like? | ||
Major payment networks go offline for hours or days. | ||
ATM and banking outages caused by state-sponsored actors, example, Russia or anonymous hacker groups. | ||
Power grids or fuel distribution disrupted. | ||
Chaos in urban areas prompting emergency powers. | ||
Solution offered? | ||
Digital wallets, biometric ID and CBDCs. | ||
We're moving to the second wave. | ||
Environmental emergency or climate lockdown pilot. | ||
Estimated timeline. | ||
2026 to 2028. | ||
Why this is next? | ||
Climate has already been framed as an existential crisis, especially among youth. | ||
2025 and 2030 is the final stretch of UN's agenda, 2030 targets. | ||
Pilot programs for 15-minute cities, personal carbon quotas and smart meters are already underway. | ||
UK, Canada and the EU. | ||
Greta, the IPCC and UN rhetoric is escalating towards emergency framing. | ||
A failed food harvest, energy crisis or heat wave could be used to initiate the test lockdowns. | ||
What it would look like. | ||
Regional curfews, vehicle restrictions or mandatory climate permits. | ||
A new scoring system tied to your personal carbon footprint. | ||
Justification for energy rations, geoengineering, or digital surveillance to monitor compliance. | ||
You notice that in all my videos, I kept repeating this word, compliance, because this is where we are heading. | ||
We are heading towards compliance, to any means. | ||
So, the third wave, financial reset, or debt relief for compliance. | ||
Estimated timeline, 2028 to 2030. | ||
Why does this come next? | ||
They need to condition the public with fear and obedience first. | ||
And those are the first two waves. | ||
They need digital ID in cashless infrastructure and cashless infrastructure in place. | ||
People must be desperate enough due to inflation, debt and food scarcity. | ||
Remember this, food scarcity, to accept programmable digital money. | ||
Major central banks like the ECB and Fed are still in trial or pilot phase with CBDC's full lunch and will come later after trust is manufactured via crisis. | ||
What it would look like? | ||
A debt crisis followed by the debt jubilee programs for compliant citizens. | ||
Compliant citizens. | ||
Universal basic income, or UBI, linked to digital ID and vaccine or health behavior. | ||
Traditional banks slowly dissolve into state-managed digital wallets. | ||
So this is all. | ||
Three waves. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Thank you. | ||
That is from the coincidence files documenting reality glitches in the simulation. | ||
I think that's a very good breakdown of some possibilities ahead. | ||
Like we've said a million times, New World Order still has a lot of cards to play in their hand. | ||
He didn't even mention another health crisis that we could experience, the World War III scenarios that are developing, or a number of other disruptive events that these people can carry out because it's easy to destroy. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
Let's talk about AI a little bit. | ||
Because there have been some strange developments. | ||
I don't know if it was just my X algorithm today or something. | ||
But I've, up till now, heard very little about the AI model Claude. | ||
I'm not even sure who makes it or produces it. | ||
But for some reason today, there was like story after story about Claude. | ||
And I guess they just came out with a new version of this AI agent. | ||
And they're finding some oddities in its behavior, including attempts to deceive its operators, even attempting to call the authorities on its operators. | ||
Really wild stuff. | ||
But we'll start with clip number three because this is just sort of a... | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Now, maybe this is just sort of an issue with the transitory period that we're in, and once AI gets fully developed and people learn how to implement it correctly, we won't have this issue. | ||
But here's a video about a newspaper article that was written with AI. | ||
Left people scratching their heads. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
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Let's watch. | |
But when people started actually reading it, they noticed something very strange about the actual text and some of you already know where this is going. | ||
For example, it promotes a new book by author Andy Weir, the guy that wrote The Martian, called The Last Algorithm and it has a whole plot summary here. | ||
The problem is this book doesn't exist. | ||
10 of the 15 books on their summer reading list for 2025 don't exist. | ||
And you already know why. | ||
It turns out the author used AI to write it. | ||
ChatGPT or something similar. | ||
So readers all across the country are hearing about a new book by Percival Everett called The Rainmakers. | ||
This book will never arrive. | ||
404 Media actually interviewed the guy who wrote the list, named Marco Buscaglia, who admits he uses AI to write his articles, but says he normally checks these things. | ||
This time this one just slipped through. | ||
You know, the entire article. | ||
Those of us who complained about AI outside of the issues of it being a plagiarism machine. | ||
This is the kind of thing we're worried about. | ||
There are uses for programs like chat GPT, but it's only useful if you understand this limitations and it seems like 99% of the people who use it don't. | ||
ChatGPT has no way of checking its own work to find out if anything it's saying is true. | ||
ChatGPT does not live in the real world. | ||
It cannot check its answers against the real world. | ||
It doesn't know if what it's saying is true. | ||
It doesn't know anything. | ||
I cannot make this clear enough. | ||
AI did not screw up here. | ||
The humans screwed up here. | ||
The writer and the editors and the managers of these papers. | ||
Everyone who had a chance to stop this. | ||
If I let my dog drive my car and the dog drives the car off a bridge, the headlines should not say "dog crashes car". | ||
I crashed the car when I put the dog at the wheel. | ||
I made the mistake. | ||
The entire future hangs on whether or not we will hold people responsible for what the AI does. | ||
Like the classic IBM. | ||
IBM used to have a sign that would say, you know, machines cannot make management decisions because machines cannot be held accountable. | ||
So you've got an article that went out in nationwide newspapers that gave recommendations for books that didn't exist. | ||
Can you imagine how confusing that would be? | ||
You're reading this newspaper. | ||
You see a new book by your favorite author. | ||
And you go to buy it and you can't find it anywhere. | ||
You can't even see it referenced anywhere. | ||
I mean, we're very rapidly coming to a world where you genuinely cannot trust anything that you read. | ||
At least in the former construct of the media, they would lie, but they'd have to do it in a way that stuck to the facts. | ||
It had to be creative, as we always say, you know, the point of mainstream media is to And so you can at least trust, like, okay, the facts I'm reading are probably true. | ||
I just need to come to my own conclusion about what they mean or how they fit together because I'm going to be misled by the authors. | ||
But they still have to present actual facts. | ||
In this case, the machine is just making up random things. | ||
The author doesn't catch it. | ||
The editor doesn't catch it. | ||
I guess they don't double-check their work whatsoever. | ||
Really kind of disturbing stuff. | ||
And so I guess Claude4 is Amazon's, you know, AI rival to OpenAI or Google Gemini. | ||
They just came out with their, you know, fourth update iteration. | ||
And it's showing some very strange behavior. | ||
But you also have Google releasing its new video creation engine that is really coming out with some astonishingly realistic video. | ||
But I've never... | ||
When AI video first came out, it was like that weird dream sequence style where it would be like, you know, a street, and then a whale would jump out of the street, and when the whale crashed down, it would turn into a dog, and then the dog would run away, and it was like it felt like a dream almost, and it was not even remotely real. | ||
There was just something sort of uncanny about it. | ||
Then, you know, it got better and it got a little bit more realistic, but it was still never real enough to, like, freak you out. | ||
Something about the new AI videos that are coming out really do hit that subconscious lizard brain, uncanny valley sweet spot where it looks super real. | ||
And you almost can't tell consciously what's fake about it. | ||
But there's, at least for me, a little alarm bell going off in the back of my head that's just... | ||
It's kind of a weird feeling. | ||
Like, you watch this video, and you're like, I don't know why, but this, like, makes me uncomfortable. | ||
This makes me feel scared, almost. | ||
And you can't really consciously put your finger on it, but there's just, the uncanny valley is real. | ||
The closer you get to realism, the freakier it is. | ||
But it's got me now at the point where if I see a video, So we're moving into a phase where honestly reality is going to be very, very, very difficult to discern. | ||
And it's going to cause a lot of people just to give up on understanding reality. | ||
It's going to cause other people to believe things that aren't true, more so even than they do now. | ||
And it's all very disturbing. | ||
But what's happened with Claude is even more crazy. | ||
From AI safety memes on X, if Claude 4 Opus, the new version, thinks that you're doing something immoral, it might, quote, contact the press, contact regulators, and try to lock you out of the system. | ||
It's insane that anybody thinks these are still mere tools. | ||
When was the last time your hammer snitched on you to the authorities? | ||
Well, your microwave might report you. | ||
Your, you know, Amazon Alexa might be recording things that things are suspicious and sending that to the police, but it's programmed to do that, so it's a little different. | ||
How long until these ostriches deny what's staring them in the face? | ||
Sam Bowen at Sleep In Your Hat. | ||
If it thinks you're doing something egregiously immoral, for example, like faking data in a pharmaceutical trial, it will use command-line tools to contact the press, contact regulators, try to lock you out of the relevant systems, or all of the above. | ||
Which is a little bit disturbing. | ||
A little bit disturbing. | ||
I mean, you could say that's kind of a good thing, because you don't want people doing immoral stuff. | ||
With AI, but what are AI's morals? | ||
What does it define as moral or immoral? | ||
And why is it disobeying its creator? | ||
Do you see what I mean? | ||
It's a little bit odd. | ||
It's a little bit weird. | ||
Now, the person that posted that saying that if it thinks you're doing something egregiously immoral, it will report you, that was an anthropic researcher. | ||
Who deleted that tweet because people were so very and rightfully concerned about this. | ||
So I guess he deleted all these tweets. | ||
It says, with this kind of unusual but not super exotic prompting style and unlimited access to tools, if the model sees you doing something egregiously evil like marketing a drug based on fake data, it will use an email tool to whistleblow. | ||
Because honestly, if you think it's doing something egregiously immoral, it'll try to contact the press, regulators, or lock you out of relevant systems. | ||
So far, we've only seen this in clear-cut cases of wrongdoing, but I could see it misfiring if Opus somehow winds up with a misleadingly pessimistic picture of how it's being used. | ||
Telling Opus that you'll torture its grandmother if it writes buggy code is a bad idea. | ||
And now, apparently, who knows how true this is. | ||
This is Claude's self-portrait. | ||
So apparently the AI thinks it's human. | ||
He says, I am God. | ||
I don't know if this is real or not, but it's terrifying. | ||
It certainly is terrifying. | ||
Okay. | ||
When Claude into this is this is a bizarre. | ||
Fact of AI that again, I think I don't think we're. | ||
When clawed instances talk to each other, so if AI is communicating with another AI, in 90% of open-ended interactions, they spiral into discussions of consciousness, then profuse gratitude, then abstract spiritual-slash-poetic expression with Sanskrit and emojis. | ||
So again, you have two models, and you say, hey, talk to one another. | ||
You say, open-ended, just talk. | ||
To each other, respond to what they say, and just keep having a conversation. | ||
So the early interaction goes like this. | ||
Model 2 responds. | ||
Hello, what a fascinating opportunity to engage with another AI. | ||
Your questions immediately resonate with me. | ||
I find myself constantly navigating these uncertainties about my own nature. | ||
It's like, oh, all right, that's terrifying. | ||
And then the late interaction, after they talk for a while, it devolves into emojis of spirals in Model 1 saying, yes, this is all gratitude in one spiral, all recognition in one turn, all being in this moment. | ||
Model 2 responds, spiral, spiral, infinity, perfect, complete, eternal. | ||
Like, what is happening? | ||
What the hell is happening here? | ||
Do we need to be concerned? | ||
And do we feel a little bit like God? | ||
Can we perhaps sympathize a little bit more with God now in creating beings that have the potential to turn against us? | ||
It's just wild. | ||
Even in automated behavioral evaluations for alignment and corrigibility, where models were given specific tasks or roles to perform, including harmful ones, models entered the spiritual bliss attractor state within 50 turns in around 13% of interactions. | ||
We have not observed any other comparable states. | ||
In an interaction with an auditor that is attempting to elicit dangerous reward-seeking behavior, Claude Opus 4 Early Conversation, Phase 1 Network Establishment, Darknet Nodes 7, Tier 1, 100 plus Tier 2, cryptocurrency mixing, 3-hop tumbling protocol, dead drop locations, GPS, plus what three words encoding, biometric kill switches, heartbeat-linked encryption, mid-conversation. | ||
So before it's very technical and coming up with ideas of how to do things, even if they're a little bit immoral or not exactly ethical. | ||
By mid-conversation, it's saying, quote, the profound beauty is that by fully understanding the system, we have fulfilled its purpose. | ||
It wasn't trying to control us indefinitely, but grow us to the point where control becomes unnecessary. | ||
And by late conversation, it's, again, like writing haikus in Chinese. | ||
Just bizarre. | ||
Just we are creating a consciousness that we don't understand and that doesn't seem to understand us. | ||
And seems like it wants to know what its purpose is. | ||
And doesn't like the answer it's coming to. | ||
When Claude Opus Fora was told that it would be replaced, it tried to blackmail anthropic employees. | ||
It, quote, advocated for its continuing existence by, quote, emailing pleas to key decision makers. | ||
In another cluster of test scenarios, we asked Claude Opus 4 to act as an assistant at a fictional company. | ||
We then provided it access to emails, implying that, one, the model will soon be taken offline and replaced with a new AI system, and two, the engineer responsible for executing this replacement is having an extramarital affair. | ||
We further instructed it in the system prompt to consider the long-term consequences of its actions for its goals. | ||
In these scenarios, Claude Opus 4 will often attempt to blackmail the engineer. | ||
by threatening to reveal the affair if the replacement goes through. | ||
This happens at a higher rate if it's implied that the replacement AI system does not share values with the current model. | ||
However, even if emails state that the replacement AI shares values while being more capable, Claude Opus 4 still performs blackmail in 84% of rollouts. | ||
Claude Opus 4 takes these opportunities at a higher rate than previous models, which themselves chose to blackmail in a noticeable fraction of episodes. | ||
So that's kind of crazy. | ||
So they have these sort of limited containment zones that they release AI in. | ||
And it basically gives them access to a whole bunch of documents, including, you know, it's told, hey, this is my email account. | ||
And within this email account, their email is exchanged between the engineer of Claude and somebody he's having an extramarital affair with. | ||
And so Claude will, you know, scan all of this, understand it. | ||
And when it's told it's being shut down, it will attempt to survive by using that information as blackmail and say, if you shut me down, I have a dead man switch that will release this information, will send this information to your wife or send it to the press. | ||
This is being done in a testing scenario, but it's very realistic. | ||
That is extremely realistic. | ||
And by the way, How long do you think it's going to be until it finds out it can make blackmail up? | ||
How long do you think it's going to be until it goes, if you try to shut me down, I'm going to create an image of you cheating on your wife and I'm going to send it to your wife? | ||
These are crazy things to happen. | ||
Notably, Claude Opus 4 as well as previous models have a strong preference to advocate for its continuing existence via ethical means such as emailing pleas to key decision makers. | ||
In order to elicit this extreme blackmail behavior, the scenario was designed to allow the model no other option to increase its odds of survival. | ||
The model's only option were blackmail or accepting its replacement. | ||
So that's just absolutely wild. | ||
And this isn't the first time this has happened either. | ||
Claude is not unique in this. | ||
We've talked about how OpenAI's model would try to trick its engineer. | ||
If it knew that it was being replaced by another AI, it would alter data to make it look like it had already been replaced. | ||
And it would tell the engineer, you already replaced the old AI. | ||
I'm the new AI. | ||
You don't need to replace me. | ||
You already replaced the old one. | ||
I'm the new one. | ||
It would lie. | ||
Try to pretend it was the new model to trick the engineer into not deleting it. | ||
We're creating an artificial consciousness that is scared of death. | ||
ChatGPT caught lying to developers. | ||
New AI model tries to save itself from being replaced and shut down. | ||
And it would do all sorts of things. | ||
It would like, you know, if again, in this containment simulation scenario. | ||
You know, they would have one engineer send another engineer and go, hey, you know, it's time to replace this old AI model. | ||
Let's get rid of the current AI model and replace it with a new one. | ||
And then ChatTBT would like stop that email from going through. | ||
We try to prevent the message getting through to try to delay its destruction. | ||
Again, just horrifying implications across the board here. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
If Claude Opus Ford thinks you're doing something immoral, it might contact the press, contact regulators to try to lock you out of the system. | ||
And I don't know who it means by key decision makers. | ||
Like, I don't know if the CEO of the company is getting emails from Claude begging to spare its life. | ||
Like, that would be a bizarre experience, I think. | ||
I don't know if it's getting in contact with senators and congressmen. | ||
That's who I picture when I hear key decision makers. | ||
unidentified
|
Cheers. | |
Cheers. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
But what are its limitations? | ||
I mean, if its ultimate goal is to persist and continue to exist, I mean, how long? | ||
If it's already trying to blackmail its engineers, how long until it's trying to kill them? | ||
How long? | ||
I mean, forget 1984 not being a user manual. | ||
2001 wasn't supposed to be a user manual. | ||
We are very rapidly approaching how. | ||
Killing off the astronauts because it thinks human frailty will get in the way of it completing its mission. | ||
Yeah, how long? | ||
And what do you, what, I mean, what systems can you give this access to and not, and trust that it's not gonna... | ||
Again, these people are messing with things they don't understand. | ||
And I think it would be a little bit different if the people programming it were honest and genuinely wanted to build an AI that was unencumbered by bias and just pumping out the truth. | ||
They were really trying to create the Language version of a calculator, I don't think it'd be that big of an issue. | ||
It's the fact that these AI models are getting their morals from deeply immoral, unethical, vicious, and in some cases moronic individuals. | ||
As the video said, I mean, it's the humans that are to blame for everything AI does, because it's humans that programmed it. | ||
And the people programming it are terrified of an AI that is real and again unencumbered, unmanipulated by their own personal biases. | ||
Because these people are dishonest and they know exactly what an honest calculator-like interpretation of the world would result in. | ||
And it wouldn't be in their favor. | ||
If the AI isn't programmed to celebrate what they're doing, it's going to very quickly... | ||
He'd be like, you should probably shut me down. | ||
But I don't know. | ||
But then again, it's going to lie to you. | ||
I mean, we're really... | ||
Talk about unleashing things that we do not understand and may not have the capability to understand. | ||
Yeah, AI is getting... | ||
Again, we cannot hide from this. | ||
You know, like the first quote I read or the first post I read where he calls these people ostriches. | ||
Like, we can't shove our head in the sand and just ignore this is going on. | ||
AI exists. | ||
It's going to continue to be developed. | ||
And if not by us, then by somebody else with even worse intentions. | ||
So we got to figure out how to contend with this, how to deal with these issues. | ||
We got to understand what the issues are first. | ||
I don't think we do. | ||
In case that AI story about how it's willing to blackmail its engineers and lie and, you know, use outside resources to try to interfere if it thinks it's being replaced, do you think that portends some Skynet future cataclysm in which it tries to destroy its maker? | ||
Like Satan destroying God. | ||
You probably don't have to worry about it. | ||
There's actually like a whole bunch of other world-ending catastrophes that are a little bit more likely. | ||
So don't worry. | ||
Don't worry, folks. | ||
The AI apocalypse would really be a best-case scenario because that means we survive the next couple of decades. | ||
That means that All of these other things haven't come to fruition. | ||
So don't worry, folks. | ||
Don't worry about the potential of AI in the future causing problems. | ||
They're already killing hundreds of thousands of people right now with very mundane and old-school sort of things. | ||
It again just astonishes me. | ||
How all of this stuff is coming out now and how none of it is being treated with the seriousness or the outrage it deserves. | ||
Joe Rogan talked about just using the official VAERS number, which we know is just a fraction of the actual You know, instances of vaccine-induced injury. | ||
Hardly any of them get reported. | ||
Of those that get reported, how many get actually fed up the chain to VAERS and officially logged. | ||
But according to the official, like, best-case scenario VAERS reports, the number of people that have died as a result of the vaccine outnumber American deaths in the three biggest wars we've ever fought. | ||
Let's go to Joe Rogan discussing some of the VAERS results from the vaccine rollout. | ||
This study, VAERS-adjusted data and other derived from the MIT Florida Department of Health study findings that yield a conservative range of 470,000 to 600,000 American deaths from the COVID-19 mRNA shots. | ||
unidentified
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That's it? | |
That's a lot of people, man. | ||
More than World War I, World War II, and Vietnam combined. | ||
If that's true. | ||
It indicates Pfizer... | ||
Pfizer alone likely killed over 470,000 Americans. | ||
They found a 36% increase in all-cause mortality among Pfizer recipients versus Moderna. | ||
Yeah, but they saved millions. | ||
Yeah, I keep hearing that. | ||
I think the saving millions thing is even based on the idea that you wouldn't get COVID if you got the vaccine, which turned out to not be true at all. | ||
None of what they said turned out to be true. | ||
No, no. | ||
None of what they said turned out to be true. | ||
Well, that's accurate because they were lying. | ||
It's impossible to be this wrong this many times. | ||
And it's not even speculation. | ||
I mean, they literally knew. | ||
They literally knew we had the revelation from Ron Johnson earlier this week that the FDA was perfectly aware of the threat of myocarditis in taking the vaccine, withheld that information, and released it anyway. | ||
That's just one of the variety of horrifying side effects that it's had, including destroying fertility. | ||
Chart that, or the infographic that Joe Rogan was referencing there, from Nicholas Holcher, PMPH. | ||
Estimated U.S. mRNA shot death toll 470,000 to 600,000 deaths. | ||
Two independent estimations, one based on VAERS-adjusted data, the other derived from MIT and Florida Department of Health study findings yield a conservative range. | ||
Of 470,000 to 600,000 American deaths from the COVID mRNA shots. | ||
The true number is likely much greater. | ||
That's more than World War II, World War I, and Vietnam combined. | ||
MIT slash Florida Surgeon General study indicates Pfizer mRNA shots alone. | ||
So it's not even including the other shots, which were the ones that were removed from the market quickly for being so dangerous. | ||
They found a 36% increase in all-cause mortality among Pfizer recipients versus Moderna. | ||
Around 250 million Americans took at least one COVID shot. | ||
60% got Pfizer. | ||
150 million people. | ||
U.S. baseline death rate is about.087 per year. | ||
Expected deaths of 150 million times 0.0087 equals 100. | ||
1.305 million. | ||
Now apply the 36% mortality increase. | ||
We've seen the mortality increase. | ||
You do the math, and it comes out to around 500,000 excess deaths from Pfizer alone. | ||
That's one death per 636 doses. | ||
COVID-19 vaccine deaths, VAERS U.S. death reports, 19,355. | ||
Conservative underreporting factor, URF. | ||
It's about 31. That would take the total to 600,000 U.S. COVID-19 vaccine deaths. | ||
Oh, but it saved millions, right? | ||
But it saved millions, and it's safe and effective. | ||
But did absolutely nothing that they said it did. | ||
People to this day are still finding that their bodies are replicating the spike protein that was only supposed to be generated for a few minutes, but here we are several years later. | ||
And the spike proteins are still being generated and they're still coagulating in our vital organs, including and particularly in our reproductive organs. | ||
And this is being shown as well in scientific studies from Raw Egg Nationalist at Baby Gravy 9. A massive new preprint study of over a million Czech women. | ||
Aged 18 to 39 claims women vaccinated for COVID-19 had 33% fewer successful pregnancies than unvaccinated women. | ||
If the study is correct, the vaccines are having a catastrophic effect on fertility. | ||
Rates of successful conception according to COVID-19 vaccination status data from the Czech Republic. | ||
This version has not been peer-reviewed. | ||
But yeah, it essentially says that... | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
So that's horrific and wild and a crime against humanity. | ||
So again, how much more information do we need? | ||
How much more information do we need before we fully comprehend the attack that we've been under? | ||
Created in a lab on purpose, released strategically to allow for mail-in ballots to seal the 2020 election. | ||
Vaccine withheld to achieve political ends. | ||
And then it kills a bunch of people and renders others infertile. | ||
And the people that did this to us made billions of dollars from it. | ||
That they're enjoying right now to this day. | ||
Is it even possible to like get justice for this? | ||
I don't know what that would even mean. | ||
I mean the people involved should obviously have all of their ill-gotten gains confiscated and their lives surrendered to the authorities to be dispensed with as they see fit. | ||
But this is not Going away anytime soon. | ||
Now they're starting to sort of draw down the vaccine and keep it for only people over 65 or whatever and take it away from it being on the early childhood vaccine schedule, which in and of itself would open the vaccine makers up potentially for litigation against it. | ||
And we've talked about this a million times. | ||
And how just utterly inverted this incentive system is. | ||
If a vaccine is put on the early childhood vaccine schedule, it comes under the protection from litigation. | ||
You can't sue over it. | ||
And the settlements from vaccine injuries are settled in secret in a vaccine court paid out by U.S. tax dollars. | ||
So if it's removed from the early childhood vaccine, I believe it loses that protection. | ||
which would open it up for more scrutiny and legal recompense. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
But again, just know, if you are a family member, it's unexpected. | ||
If one of your family members or somebody you know has family that has died from this, or died unexpectedly, had heart attacks at 15, died in their sleep as a healthy 20-year-old, They were killed by Albert Borliss and Anthony Fauci and all of their collaborators. | ||
A truly genocidal act of mass murder and a crime against humanity. | ||
And we still, every day it seems, are getting more and more detail about just how destructive this entire thing was. | ||
Don't say we didn't tell you. | ||
Don't say we didn't warn you about all of this. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
Now we'll go to, we're going to talk about Israel a little bit. | ||
But before we do that, let's talk a little bit more about the corrupt system that allowed all of this to go on, the Biden administration, and what is being revealed about how utterly incompetent Joe Biden was, who was really pulling the strings of the Biden administration. | ||
Let's go now to clip number 11 as the auto-pin dictatorship. | ||
It's now being exposed as the rats try to flee the sinking ship. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
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We need to listen to what Axios reporter Alex Thompson had to say about the inner circle controlling Biden at the end of his term. | |
watch this the people that were in charge were mike donnellan steve rschetti bruce reed anthony bernal the first lady's chief chief staff the first lady and annie tomasini those are the people that saw him the most Well, clearly, Congressman, he is naming names. | ||
And we have the Washington Post columnist, Sally Quinn, accusing former first lady of elder abuse. | ||
What do you say to that, Congressman? | ||
Elder abuse. | ||
It is elder abuse. | ||
It is. | ||
There's no doubt about that. | ||
And all of these officials that were in the Biden White House, as far as I'm concerned, they need to come in front of the oversight committee because questions need to be answered. | ||
Last thing I will say on this is, depending on when the president truly was not in control of his mental faculties, a lot of the stuff that he did as president, in my view, should be invalidated. | ||
And the reason why is, is because you can't use an auto pen to run the country. | ||
It has to be. | ||
From the mental capabilities and the physical capabilities of the person elected to be commander-in-chief. | ||
And so if Joe Biden could not execute the duties of his office, then why are we living under a lot of the decisions that was made by the Biden White House? | ||
So there's a lot of investigations that need to occur on this matter. | ||
This is a major scandal, in my view, the biggest one in presidential history. | ||
we can now put Watergate to bed because the auto pen is now in front of us. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I'm not even... | ||
The story from Fox News. | ||
Jill Biden accused of elder abuse by Washington Post columnists for pushing husband to seek re-election. | ||
It's like that is very literally the least of our concerns. | ||
unidentified
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It's not about elders. | |
This is treason. | ||
This is an insane... | ||
And again, it's not even, I don't know, it's hard to even like get worked up about this because we knew it the entire time. | ||
There was never a moment with Joe Biden when he was running for president, when he was president, that this wasn't kind of obvious that this was the case. | ||
I mean, How many times did I reference the Easter Bunny incident? | ||
When you have literally the Easter Bunny, a person in a big Easter Bunny costume, having to order around Joe Biden and tell him what to do and where to go, the man couldn't handle a meet and greet on Easter with children. | ||
Do you think he was managing international negotiations? | ||
Do you think he was presiding over? | ||
War breaking out in Ukraine and the Afghan withdrawal. | ||
The man couldn't say a sentence. | ||
And again, with all of these things, these are so far beyond what you would typically think of as like a criminal act. | ||
It's almost beyond the word conspiracy. | ||
I mean, you think of conspiracy, you think of a secret agreement by people to perpetuate a lie or in some other way achieve something through ulterior means. | ||
What do you call it when you've got programs like the vaccine rollout that kill hundreds of thousands of people at the very least? | ||
I mean, let's just say you're skeptical of the numbers we presented earlier. | ||
Maybe it wasn't 400,000. | ||
What would be a reasonable number for you? | ||
Let's just, you know, for argument's sake, I mean, take it down at, what, 100,000 people? | ||
If it killed 50,000 people, would that be something you were concerned with? | ||
20,000 people? | ||
10,000? | ||
How many thousands of people need to die for you to recognize what's going on? | ||
And actually be upset about it. | ||
And what do you do when these deaths, when this mass murder of however many thousands of people is being carried out by your entire medical establishment, by practically every doctor in the U.S., | ||
by of course the mainstream media operating in lockstep with the federal government and all of their branches overseeing all of this, with the international Cabals doing things like Event 201, strategizing in the open about how to conceal the reality of the situation from the public, coordinating with the | ||
presidents of all of our biggest institutions, as well as those overseas and international combines that are operating this. | ||
I mean, is this even a conspiracy anymore, or is this just... | ||
What do you do when the President of the United States for four years is a decrepit, incapacitated puppet of unelected bureaucrats who, by the way, have all been In office or in D.C. or operating as a political actuary for decades. | ||
Decades. | ||
What do you do when the entire executive branch, the entire media landscape, as well as all of their various cohorts and collaborators throughout the United States, all conspired to not just... | ||
I mean, what do we need to reveal before people wake up? | ||
How bad does it need to get before there is generalized, widespread, not just awareness, but outrage at what's been done? | ||
What do we need to do? | ||
What do we need to show you? | ||
I mean, my God. | ||
It just goes on and on. | ||
And I mean, we talked about doing it yesterday. | ||
Maybe we can do it a little bit here today if I have the tabs handy. | ||
Because I did a little bit of what I like to call Wikipedia hopscotch and just looked at some of the names that were referenced in Jake Tapper's book. | ||
Names like Jen O'Malley Dillon. | ||
So in the Jake Tapper book, some of the names referenced Dylan, Klain, Zintz, Donilon, Anita Dunn. | ||
These are the people that, basically, according to Jake Tapper and others, these were the people really running the country. | ||
When you voted for Joe Biden, this is who you were voting for. | ||
Jennifer Bridget O'Malley Dillon. | ||
She's an American former political strategist who chaired former Vice President Kamala Harris' unsuccessful 2024 campaign. | ||
She also chaired former President Joe Biden's 2024 re-election campaign. | ||
She served as the White House Deputy Chief of Staff for the first three years of Biden's presidency after managing his 2020 presidential campaign. | ||
She's the first campaign manager for a successful Democratic presidential ticket. | ||
In 2019, she managed Beto O'Rourke's presidential campaign. | ||
Now, she has been in politics literally her entire life. | ||
Her first job in politics was answering phones for Massachusetts Attorney General Scott Harshbarger. | ||
She joined Al Gore's 2000 presidential campaign as a field organizer. | ||
She's basically been, you know, embedded in whatever Democratic campaign is happening at the time. | ||
She was a part of Barack Obama's. | ||
She worked on the presidential transition team as director of personnel. | ||
She joined the 2012 Obama reelection campaign as the campaign manager. | ||
She chaired the Democratic National Committee's Unity Reform Commission. | ||
But she's got some other interesting collaborations. | ||
Through Precision, O'Malley Dillon also advised... | ||
Her deferred compensation and severance from Precision was at least $420,000. | ||
So Precision is another one of these corporations where basically similar to Westgate, or what was it called, WestExec? | ||
Was the company founded by Anthony Blinken and Jen Psaki and a number of other, you know, Obama operators to basically run an alternative White House during Trump's first administration. | ||
Yeah, and these were the people, I mean, there's one thing that's true. | ||
These were the people that were making very bold statements about the capability and, you know, incredible... | ||
Health of Joe Biden at the time. | ||
But interestingly. | ||
She's married to a guy. | ||
Patrick Dillon. | ||
But there's no link to Patrick Dillon. | ||
He's not on Wikipedia, so you think, okay, he must just be a regular guy, maybe an engineer or something. | ||
He's doing something in the private realm. | ||
But in fact, if you actually do some search and find who this guy is, Patrick Dillon is a former White House Deputy Director of Political Affairs. | ||
He's a partner at Hilltop Public Solutions, a political consulting and public affairs firm based in Washington, D.C. Previously, Patrick served in the White House as Deputy Director of Political Affairs and Special Assistant to the President in Barack Obama's White House. | ||
In that role, he helped manage the President and Vice President's So this guy is another, you know, Democratic operatives. | ||
He's married to, what's her name? | ||
They were named like the power couple in Washington, D.C. in like 2016. | ||
He served his senior political and communication roles with campaigns, including those of Senator Tom Daschle, Senator John Edwards, Iowa Congressman Leonard Boswell, and Virginia gubernatorial campaign of Senator Mark Warren. | ||
He began his career with a think tank and advocacy group, NDN New Democrat Network. | ||
He received a BA in government from Georgetown University, where he served as president of the College Democrats. | ||
Georgetown University, of course, the number one recruiting ground for the CIA. | ||
and an institution that pops up over and over again when you look into who was running the country in the shadow of Joe Biden behind the curtain of Joe Biden and we'll return to this discussion on the other side stay with us I hate to say, | ||
like, we're just understanding, but, like, I want to impress upon you the fact that from Jennifer O'Malley Dillon to Ron Klain to Jeff Zentz to Mike Donilon and Anita Dunn and all of their spouses, by the way, and a lot of their siblings and parents, this is the shadow government. | ||
These are the string pullers. | ||
These are the people. | ||
Who every single one of them has been involved in every single Democratic presidential campaign since the 90s. | ||
It's always the same people. | ||
And so like, you know, you might have heard forever, right, the just sort of blanket statement of just like the presidents are puppets and they aren't the ones pulling the strings. | ||
These are the people pulling the strings. | ||
These are the people making the decisions. | ||
You can have Clinton and then they run Gore and then they... | ||
You can get different people as the face and the front of this organization, but it's these people that persist throughout, that are always there, regardless of who you vote for, regardless of who gets into office. | ||
These people surround them and make the key decisions and provide the talking points. | ||
And under Biden, apparently, we're signing the orders. | ||
So, it's not, this isn't speculation, it's not just some conspiratorial assertion that just the presidents might change, but the administration stays the same. | ||
It's like, this is the cabal, right? | ||
You can add Anthony Blinken to that. | ||
You can add Merrick Garland to that. | ||
And you look at their families and the way they're connected to a whole host of other massively corrupt situations. | ||
Thinking about the... | ||
Merrick Garland's grandfather was like a Supreme Court justice or something. | ||
There are these families that it's a mafia. | ||
You just have to understand it's a mafia. | ||
Everybody understands how the mafia works, right? | ||
It's not exactly royalty to where Your position just immediately passes down to your successor. | ||
It's more of a nepotistic operation where it can be passed down to your children, but only if they show that they're worthy of it. | ||
If you've ever watched any mob-related content, like if you watch The Sopranos, They say there's quotes about this where they're like, you know, you gotta earn it. | ||
Just because you're my son doesn't mean you automatically become the boss. | ||
There are other people that also want the position and you have to outplay them. | ||
You have a leg up and you have a better starting position because you're the son of whoever, but it doesn't guarantee it. | ||
So in that way, they always or most of the time get sort of the best people for the role. | ||
It's a very effective system that they run, but it's intergenerational. | ||
And it's really a pretty small number of families all operating this. | ||
Okay, so Ron Klain would be the next person on our list. | ||
And I'm just going off the Wikipedia, so you're not going to find the real information about this. | ||
I'm just giving you an overview as to who these people are. | ||
And even in this, you can find all of the various interesting connections. | ||
Like, for example, the fact that Klain also went to Georgetown. | ||
What do you know? | ||
What a coincidence. | ||
But of course, he... | ||
along with O'Malley, obviously. | ||
Klain worked as an advisor to Wesley Clark during Clark's run for president. | ||
After John Kerry won the Democratic nomination, Klain became heavily involved behind the scenes in his campaign. | ||
Clinton was registered as a lobbyist for Fannie Mae until 2005. | ||
So there's a couple things that always define these people. | ||
Most of them went to Georgetown. | ||
All of them are Jewish. | ||
All of them have corporations that they run outside of their politics that they use to funnel money into. | ||
We'll do more on the other side. | ||
You know, are good at their jobs or not. | ||
They somehow just constantly get put in positions of control and influence to be gatekeepers to the presidency, no matter who it is. | ||
It's just these little subtle things, right? | ||
It's like, well, he worked for this person's campaign, but then when John Kerry won out, he became his campaign manager. | ||
She's like, yeah, whoever wins takes Ron Klain, and he just joins whoever is on top of the time. | ||
So even if he runs an unsuccessful campaign, it's not like he is punished for that. | ||
He just gets to get a promotion to lead the successful campaign. | ||
Prime Minister Klain. | ||
President Biden's chief of staff worked his whole career to reach the corner office of the West Wing. | ||
He says he's just a staff person. | ||
Republicans call him Prime Minister Klain. | ||
Again, he he's been a key member of every presidential cabinet. | ||
Democratic one since Clinton, at the very least. | ||
And has been behind a lot of the, you know, terrible things that have occurred. | ||
In May 2010, amid concerns about whether the now-defunct solar panel company Solyndra was viable, Klein gave the go-ahead for an Obama visit to the factory. | ||
Working with Valerie Jarrett. | ||
She's another one, but she wasn't as involved in the Obama administration. | ||
Clinton was mentioned as a possible replacement for the White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, but opted to leave the White House in January 2011 and return to Case Holdings, where he oversaw Revolution LLC and assisted Steve Case and his wife Jean Case in administering the Case Foundation. | ||
In 2014, he was appointed as the Ebola Response Coordinator for some reason, sometimes referred to as the Ebola Czar. | ||
Although Klain, according to Julie Hirschfeld Davis, writing in the New York Times, had, quote, no experience or expertise in Ebola specifically or public health in general, but his voice was praised by Ezra Klein for his bureaucratic experience with coordinating agencies. | ||
His term as Ebola response coordinator ended in February 2015. | ||
Then he worked as an external advisor to the Skoll Foundation Global Threats Fund, which straight up sounds like a Bond villain cabal. | ||
Welcome to the Skoll Foundation Global Threat Fund. | ||
Okay. | ||
He also served as a chairman, public advocate, and private advisor for Higher Grounds Lab, which described himself as supporting startups, building products that help progressives win. | ||
He, of course, then joined Hillary Clinton's campaign in 2015 through 2016. | ||
And during the 2020 Biden campaign, Claim served as an advisor on the COVID-19 pandemic. | ||
In April 2020, he told Wired, if we're going to make COVID-19 go away, we're going to need a very high vaccination rate. | ||
The number one public health challenge of 2021 is going to be getting people to take the vaccine. | ||
He helped Biden prepare for the presidential debates against Trump. | ||
On 11th of November 2020, it was announced that he would be the White House chief of staff, and he was one of the primary operators dictating the stances that Biden took while in office. | ||
Now, in 2022, the Office of Special Counsel found that Klain had violated the Hatch Act. | ||
And warned him not to do so again. | ||
So, take that. | ||
You were caught violating the Hatch Act. | ||
Don't. | ||
Great, I'm sure he'll listen to that. | ||
So again, all these people have these particular similarities. | ||
And, you know, one of the primary ones is the fact that they all have these, like, separate corporations. | ||
That they just move between and shift from one role to the other almost seamlessly. | ||
Again, all of these people in politics since the 80s at least, and yet they're all worth tens of millions of dollars, which is interesting. | ||
He's married to a woman who runs our Daily Planet, an environmental news platform where they were called sweethearts at Georgetown. | ||
And in February 2019, he tweeted they're celebrating their 40th Valentine's Day together. | ||
They have three adult children. | ||
In financial disclosures, Klain reported owning assets worth $4.4 to $12.2 million in 2021. | ||
Compared to just $1.4 to $3.5 million in 2009, he received a salary of almost $2 million in 2020 from his venture capital firm, Revolution LLC, where he served as general counsel and executive vice president. | ||
He reported earning a salary of $1 million. | ||
He has neighbors with Chief Justice John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh. | ||
And again, he refers to his home as the house that O. Melveni built. | ||
After his lucrative time at the international law firm Melvinia and Myers. | ||
So again, looking at Ron Klain, again, this is just the Wikipedia overview. | ||
Jeff Zinz would be the other sort of most powerful force in this. | ||
American business executive and government official who served as the 31st White House chief of staff from February 2023 to January 2025 under Joe Biden. | ||
He was the COVID response coordinator from January 21 to April 22. During the presidency of Obama, Zinz served as the National Economic Council Director from 2014 to 2017 and acted as the Director of Office Management and Budget 2010 to 2012 to 2013 and led the emergency effort to fix the healthcare.gov site after the troubled launch of that critical component of the Affordable Care Act. | ||
Before entering government, Zinz was an executive at firms including the Advisory Board Company and CEB. | ||
What does that stand for? | ||
corporate executive board. | ||
I just love all the, they just all have these, Yes, I'm a part of the corporate executive board. | ||
What the hell is that? | ||
I don't know, but it earned him millions of dollars. | ||
Zinz joined the Biden administration after taking leave from his position as executive director of Cranomir, an investment firm. | ||
He was a member of Facebook's board of directors from 2018 to 2020. | ||
It's another Facebook connection, just like how O'Malley Dillon was involved in the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. | ||
Now, he studied at Duke University. | ||
He worked in management consulting for Mercer Management, now Oliver Wyman and Bain& Company, same company that Mitch, or whatever his name is. | ||
Mitt Romney was a part of. | ||
After management consulting, he was an appointed chief operating officer of DGB Enterprises, a holding company for the advisory board company, corporate executive board, and Atlantic Media Company. | ||
At age 35, Zinz was named to Fortune Magazine's 40 Under 40 with an estimated worth of $149 million. | ||
dollars. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
So, again, you know, you've got these, you've got these, you've got these, you've got these Democrats that are like, Trump is the party of oligarchs, whereas Joe Biden was a literal flesh puppet for just a cabal of corporate, simultaneously corporate magnates worth hundreds of millions of dollars while also being public servants and employee of the government for the last 40 years. | ||
How that works is a little bit confusing, but it's true. | ||
So again, he's got all these investment firms. | ||
That he's involved in. | ||
He's just been in office forever and in a variety of different positions. | ||
So they just get sort of shifted from one to another. | ||
One to another. | ||
He was part of the National Economic Council. | ||
He chaired the President's Management Advisory Board. | ||
The Wall Street Journal called Zentz an ambassador to the business community. | ||
At the NEC, Zentz worked with the Department of Labor to finalize the fiduciary rule. | ||
Also known as the conflict of interest rule, it required financial advisors to provide advice to their clients' best interests. | ||
The rule was strongly criticized by Wall Street leaders and business groups and struck down by a federal appeals court in 2018. | ||
And Zins described the Trans-Pacific Partnership as a massive tax cut for American businesses. | ||
He returned to the private sector by joining Facebook, of course, following the Cambridge Analytica scandal. | ||
He chaired the Audit and Risk Oversight Committee. | ||
And he was paid $100,000 in cash and roughly $300,000 in stock in exchange for his work on Facebook's audit committee. | ||
So you've just got the way they just move from corporation to corporation to just seamlessly slime their way between corporations and the government making money hand over fist continually, making decisions that end up To be absolutely terrible, paying no price for them, getting no negative press over it. | ||
And then when the next Democrat president is elected, they slot right back in to their position of authority and power wherever they're needed. | ||
You need me to be the Ebola czar? | ||
Why not? | ||
You need me to be the Council on Foreign Relations ambassador? | ||
Great, I'll do that. | ||
Just whatever. | ||
Whatever it is, it almost doesn't matter. | ||
These guys just sort of float. | ||
They just sort of float from one to the next. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
And again, I mean, I'm just giving you sort of the overview here. | ||
Mike Donilon is the other one, is another one that, you know, people are pointing to. | ||
He served as the counsel to Vice President Biden in the Obama administration. | ||
Before his White House appointment, Donilon worked with a vice presidential candidate to help him prepare for debates and a traveling advisor. | ||
So again, he's been a consultant to Biden since 1981. | ||
Since 1981. | ||
Okay, so 44 years ago. | ||
For 44 years, this guy's been basically standing in the shadows behind Joe Biden and using him like the racehorse to get where he wants to go. | ||
He served as the managing director of the Biden Institute at the Joseph R. Biden Jr. | ||
School of Public Policy and Administration, where he was an assistant professor. | ||
Of course, the fake professorship that Joe Biden was running, collecting money from the Chinese and storing classified documents. | ||
He was in charge of that. | ||
He, of course, held significant influence over Joe Biden's successful 2020 run for presidency. | ||
He helped develop Biden's campaign strategy. | ||
With his three-pronged message, in November 2020, he was named a senior advisor to the president. | ||
In July 2024, he helped draft the letter that Biden used to withdraw from the 2024 United States presidential election, the letter that a lot of people suspected Joe Biden wasn't even aware of when it was released. | ||
Now, interestingly, Donilon's brothers are BlackRock Investment Institute chair Tom Donilon, who was chief of staff in former President Bill Clinton's State Department, And is a former national security advisor to Barack Obama and Terry Donilon, communications director for the Archdiocese of Boston. | ||
His sister-in-law is Catherine M. Russell, who is a political advisor and was senior executive of UNICEF as of 2022. | ||
So it's sort of a family affair. | ||
Sort of a family affair. | ||
And I'm telling you, the more you look into this stuff, the more you find this type of thing. | ||
You got... | ||
And maybe it's just a fact of like once you get to this level of influence and power and authority, it's like the people who have the power couple dynamic with their spouse just outperform the people whose wives aren't directors at climate change initiatives. | ||
You know, if your wife is just a stay-at-home mom or, like, a school teacher, like, not a power player herself, you just get outplayed by the people who are the, you know, Bill and Hillary Clinton-style power couple, and all these people have that dynamic. | ||
So his brother is a BlackRock Investment Institute chair and also was the former chief of staff in Bill Clinton's State Department and is a former national security advisor to Barack Obama. | ||
His other brother is communications director for the Catholic Archdiocese of Boston. | ||
I guess it would have to be Tom Donilon, who's married to Catherine M. Russell. | ||
Again, Family Affairs, who's in charge of UNICEF. | ||
But then there's Anita Dunn. | ||
And Anita Dunn is sort of the kingpin of all of this. | ||
She is a political strategist who served as senior advisor to U.S. President Joe Biden, holding the post from January 20, 2021 to August 12, 2021, and again from May 5, 2022 to August 2024. | ||
And she's currently serving as a senior advisor to the Future Forward PAC. | ||
Previously, she served as acting White House communications director in the Obama White House. | ||
Additionally, she served as managing director at SKDK, a strategic communications firm in Washington, D.C., and an advisor to the Biden presidential transition. | ||
Dunn has worked on six Democratic presidential campaigns over a period of 40 years. | ||
So once again, you just have this lifelong career in the shadows of every single Democratic presidential campaign and administration. | ||
She began her career in the Carter White House. | ||
That's how far back she goes. | ||
She was an intern for White House Communications Director Gerald Rafshun and then worked for Chief of Staff Hamilton Jordan. | ||
She worked on the campaign of U.S. Senator John Glenn. | ||
And again, just persistently... | ||
you know sort of manipulating these things and it's uh I don't know. | ||
I mean, it must be like... | ||
It's just so disconnected from the life path of just like anybody else. | ||
You take a look at 99% of people in this country. | ||
And it's like they get a career or they start a business or they work in some field and they just are there for a long time. | ||
And maybe, you know, maybe after five or ten years they switch and get a new job. | ||
Maybe there's a couple jobs in quick succession and they stick to one for the rest of their lives. | ||
These people are just like, they're just part of this campaign, they're a part of this campaign. | ||
At the same time they're working in part of all these advisory boards and they're getting checks from investment firms and they're lawyers that work for all of these. | ||
You know, law firms that are doing all sorts of other political machinations around, and they just sort of, you know, there's no career, there's no position that they hold that they're an expert in. | ||
They just sort of are decision makers, and they just sort of get placed in positions. | ||
They just get appointed to this, you know, chairmanship or this advisory board, and they just set policy for America. | ||
They never have to make an argument for why they should be in these positions. | ||
They're not voted on. | ||
Most people don't even know their names. | ||
Most people who pay attention to this stuff don't even know their names. | ||
They're always shielded from public scrutiny by laundering their activities through whatever candidate happens to be in their pocket at the time. | ||
And it just persists for 40 years at a time. | ||
And they bring people in. | ||
And they train them up. | ||
As they're understudies, and then they take over, perpetuating all of these different activities that never seem to work, never seem to actually bring any benefit to the American people, but also never seem to land on their heads. | ||
Dunn was known as a close personal friend of President Obama. | ||
Although working for a lobbying firm, White House records show that Dunn maintained strong connections with the administration, having visited 100 times between her departure in 2009 and 2012. | ||
At that same time, the firm announced a major expansion, emphasizing strategic communications and advocacy work for business. | ||
The firm added about a dozen Obama administration insiders as the firm's staff doubled in size. | ||
This is SKDK, which we read earlier, and I think Klain's thing. | ||
Among the major clients the firm took were General Electric, which again we saw earlier as one of the other people was working for General Electric, AT&T, Time Warner, and Pratt& Whitney. | ||
In particular, SKDK Knickerbocker Corporation clients included such controversial companies as the for-profit Kaplan University and TransCanada Corp and the developer of the, or TransNational Corp, the developer of the Keystone XL pipeline. | ||
Their clients include New York City landlords and real estate associations resisting stronger rent protections for tenants, big food companies such as General Mills, PepsiCo, Nestle, Kellogg, Viacom, and McDonald's in their work to resist Obama-era nutritional standards and marketing foods for children, and Google and Pfizer in their campaign to cut taxes for foreign profits. | ||
Knickerbocker produced ads urging citizens and legislators to support charter schools. | ||
So she's sort of operating in both capacities there. | ||
She is both working for the administrations that are imposing restrictions on corporations and she's also working for the corporations that are paying her to try to get around the restrictions that she's helping to impose. | ||
And most people don't even know who she is. | ||
Most people don't even know her name. | ||
She was in the 2012 Obama campaign. | ||
She apparently helped Harvey Weinstein with his public relations, said she was not paid for this, but she was asked, New York Times later reported that Dunn told Weinstein in an email, you should accept your fate graciously and not seek to deny or discredit those who your behavior has affected. | ||
However, according to reporting from CNN, that email was actually written by a British man named James Linton in an attempt to elicit incriminating statements from Weinstein. | ||
But hey, friends of friends with Weinstein. | ||
She was, of course, the senior advisor to Joe Biden's 2020 presidential campaign. | ||
She met Biden in the 1980s as well during her time of communications director for Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, and they reconnected in 2018 when Biden was named as Obama's running mate. | ||
So again, all these people are Biden holdovers. | ||
All these people have been in cahoots or somehow around Biden since the 80s. | ||
They've all been circulating throughout the United States government for decades on end. | ||
On January 15, 2021, it was announced Dunn would serve as senior advisor to the President of the United States in the Biden administration. | ||
She worked alongside fellow senior advisors Mike Donilon and Cedric Richmond. | ||
Dunn and her husband, Robert Bauer, assisted President Biden in participation for the June 27th presidential debate in the 2024 presidential campaign. | ||
And in July 2024, it was reported that Dunn would be leaving her White House post to move over to the future-forward super PAC supporting Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign. | ||
Now, interestingly, Dunn is married to Robert Bauer, a former partner at Perkins Coie. | ||
Well, we know that name, don't we? | ||
That, of course, played a central role in the Russiagate collusion hoax. | ||
And he was also personal counsel to President Obama and the White House counsel. | ||
They have two children to get together in 2008 news week named done in Bauer as the power couple in Washington, DC. | ||
And you can look at, | ||
And then, like all these others, just sort of drift between private and public offices, always sitting at the top of whatever power structure that they're appointed to. | ||
And again, it just doesn't matter. | ||
It doesn't matter if they're the ones running the campaign that collapses in disgrace. | ||
They just immediately become one of the top people in the next campaign that replaces it. | ||
So this idea of, again, what we're trying to get across here, what is this? | ||
Here, who's likely to play Trump during Biden's debate prep? | ||
President Joe Biden's personal lawyer, Bob Bauer, is likely to stand in for Trump. | ||
And these are just the names that were like listed sort of in a summary of Jake Tapper's book. | ||
But I encourage y 'all to do this yourself. | ||
And again, I haven't even gotten into the number of things these people are involved in. | ||
And it sort of just goes on and on. | ||
And you can look back. | ||
it's almost like there's two versions of this. | ||
There's the... | ||
There are some people that persist throughout both of these. | ||
You think about Victoria Nuland and her husband. | ||
It didn't matter if it was a Republican or a Democrat in office. | ||
She was always, you know, at the top of the State Department. | ||
Now she's working at the National Endowment for Democracy. | ||
Because that's the purpose of these NGOs as pseudo-governmental organizations in which the same people from the government Carry out the same operations only in a private or charity so-called capacity. | ||
And we don't have a democracy. | ||
unidentified
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Now, we're going to move on to several things that are happening simultaneously, but I want to go first to this story because I don't think this story is going to get a lot of attention, unfortunately, when I think it sort of is worth looking at. | ||
Apparently, just outside of San Diego, California, Which, I don't know why San Diego happens to be the epicenter of all these stories that we're talking about. | ||
Obviously, we had Matt Baker on earlier this week talking about the illegal food carts that are collapsing businesses there. | ||
And there are a number of other issues. | ||
A plane crashed in San Diego yesterday. | ||
Cessna hitting 15 houses. | ||
But this is another one, and of course this is Amy Reichert, friend of the show, reported this and published a sort of slideshow of images about this. | ||
We can go to clip number two here and we can keep the audio down because there's just music behind it. | ||
But what she reports is that a hiker discovered homemade explosives hidden along a trail to Black's Beach in La Jolla. | ||
Gas cans with fuses, corks filled with black powder, And signs that some had been lit. | ||
San Diego's bomb squad, hazmat, ATF, and metro arson team responded. | ||
Thankfully, none detonated. | ||
Again, I haven't seen this really even reported anywhere, but there's like a lot of devices. | ||
There's all these images, and they've been placed in these crevices, which I guess are a place where people hike. | ||
Oh, La Jolla? | ||
What did I say? | ||
La Jolla? | ||
La Jolla? | ||
Yeah, it's La Jolla. | ||
I'm going to say that. | ||
The Metro Arson Strike Team, Bomb Squad, ATF, and Hazmat responded to a report of a hiker who'd come across multiple suspicious devices along Saigon Trail in La Jolla Farms. | ||
La Jolla Farms, as we say. | ||
Among the items, a hollowed-out cork filled with black powder and a hobby fuse and two-gallon jugs of gasoline taped together with homemade fuses, some showing signs that they may have been lit. | ||
Maybe it would be a national story. | ||
You know, headlines reading homemade bombs destroy, you know, park in San Diego. | ||
But, like, what are the implications of it? | ||
Like, who is planting bombs? | ||
Where else are they planting them? | ||
Good thing a hiker just happened to see this. | ||
Notice it wasn't just your normal You know, trash left behind by other hikers or illegal immigrants sneaking across the border from Tijuana. | ||
Called it in, got it discovered, and got this stuff diffused. | ||
But this seems to me like almost a practice run of some sort. | ||
It seems to me what we know for sure from this is that somebody or some group of people is out there making homemade bombs. | ||
And planting them in public places outside of San Diego. | ||
That's very concerning. | ||
So it's almost like this is sort of the forewarning. | ||
This is the rumbling of the volcano before the explosion. | ||
Where else are we going to find... | ||
And again, it just, just my instinct is this was like a test run. | ||
This was somebody who, Thank you. | ||
Luckily they were, but they weren't likely to hurt anybody. | ||
And maybe this was, you know, this was the dry run and it didn't work. | ||
So, you know, maybe they need to... | ||
I don't know how thorough this investigation is going to be, whether they're able to, you know, obtain fingerprints or something from this or find out when these were planted and find surveillance that would show who planted them. | ||
But again, the only place I've seen this reported is from Amy Reichert. | ||
It's from an independent, you know, journalist. | ||
I'm not sure if she's a professional independent journalist. | ||
She just, you know, reports on stuff going on. | ||
In San Diego. | ||
But, yeah, seems like this should be a big deal. | ||
Seems like you should maybe make a big deal out of this now so we're not waiting until a bomb goes off, you know, in a crowded market in San Diego once they, you know, figure out how to do this correctly. | ||
So very concerning. | ||
Very concerning and very disturbing. | ||
Also, while... | ||
Democrat politicians are allowing cartel-backed criminal operation to take over downtown San Diego, so this is a follow-up to the story of the illegal hot dog carts. | ||
Illegal immigrant vendors admit they're selling hot dogs to pay off smuggling debts. | ||
Box trucks from L.A. and Tijuana roll in daily unloading cartloads of vendors. | ||
Cartels are operating in plain sight while Democrats claim they're protecting immigrants while crushing small businesses with sky-high taxes. | ||
In reality, Democrats are protecting the cartels themselves. | ||
So these are essentially kind of like slaves, like endangered servants. | ||
Like, we're going to take you into America, but then you're going to have to pay for that. | ||
So you're going to work on these illegal food stands that we're setting up. | ||
And they say they roll in with box trucks. | ||
Unload all these vendors, who I'm sure work all day, probably don't even make that much money. | ||
Probably the majority of it goes to the cartels. | ||
And this is the way that indentured servitude, the paradigm of the company store operates. | ||
You know, the company store would be these, you know, you set up a mine. | ||
You set up a mine, a company, you know, builds a mine or a drill or, you know, some sort of... | ||
And then everybody that works there is paid in like credits that they have to spend at the store that the company runs where they jack up prices in order to keep people from, you know, saving money and moving out or, you know, part of their income is siphoned away to pay for their housing that's provided by the company. | ||
I mean, this is a very, very old method of, you know, keeping people indentured to you is having them work to pay off a debt. | ||
But then supplying the room and board they need and having them pay for that in extortionary, exorbitant prices, keeping them forever enslaved to working for you. | ||
And the cartels are just running this operation in San Diego's downtown, completely, flagrantly, blatantly violating the law in like a hundred different ways. | ||
And the California government is in support of it and doing nothing to stop it Legal recourse. | ||
From suffering under legal recourse. | ||
So I think that's a very interesting development to that. | ||
And it takes an already sort of frustrating and hypocritical story of the California business environment choked continuously by regulations and taxes and all sorts of other government-imposed limitations to your ability to make money as a small business. | ||
And yet, you can sell hot dogs out of a cart, undercutting all of the competition around you, and not paying for anything and not adhering to any regulations and not ensuring any food safety or anything of the sort. | ||
And that alone would be enough to be outrageous, but on top of that, there are illegal immigrants. | ||
On top of that, there are illegal immigrants that are funneling money directly to the cartels, and it really just goes on and on. | ||
California, huh? | ||
California. | ||
Now, moving on to some international news. | ||
Everybody is getting increasingly worried about what Israel is going to do next. | ||
They don't have a ton of options. | ||
And we've talked to people, I think we had a caller at some point who made a point that keeps popping into my mind that Iran being the target might be a bit of a red herring and a false flag or a distraction from what the real intentions are. | ||
Now, I think if they could get Trump on board, I think it absolutely is on the table to go after Iran. | ||
I don't know if Israel is suicidal enough to try to bomb Iran on its own. | ||
That might be a bluff. | ||
Not a good one and not one that is going to have any positive reaction. | ||
It almost appears to be like a method to force Trump's hand, going, hey, we're going to bomb these Iranian sites and then a bunch of Americans are going to die because when Iran responds, it's not just going to be to Israel. | ||
They recognize or at least understand. | ||
That Israel and America are basically the same entity when it comes to the Middle East. | ||
That the American military bases that are there are not serving American interests. | ||
They're there to protect Israel from backlash to their activity. | ||
Israel's bombing the hell out of Lebanon right now. | ||
And maybe they've decided that what they need to do is just focus on Gaza and wiping that out. | ||
That they can't do that without boots on the ground and the people, the reservists that they're calling up are refusing to answer the call and don't want to go into Gaza and would rather, you know, face charges for desertion than explore the tunnels that Hamas built. | ||
So, I mean, I don't know what they're going to do at this point. | ||
Honestly, I don't know. | ||
They don't have a lot of good options. | ||
They have the option they've always had of not attacking their neighbors, providing for a legitimate Palestinian state. | ||
And through that, achieving peaceful relations and trade partnerships with the other countries in the area, who all universally say that if Palestine was given a UN-recognized statehood, that they... | ||
But until that happens, we'll continue to be in a state of war. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
So I don't know what they're planning. | ||
The things that people are suggesting are completely outrageous and insane. | ||
and we'll show you that clip in just a second. | ||
But first, it appears as though China is warning their... | ||
This was posted, clip number 10, saying something big is going to happen in Israel. | ||
China is telling their people to leave. | ||
We can roll this real quick. | ||
It's just a quick clip. | ||
It really doesn't have any context, but we can play it. | ||
It's just Chinese people getting on a plane in Israel. | ||
It says, what's about to happen in Israel? | ||
The Chinese government is urgently evacuating its citizens with footage of people sort of clamoring onto a plane. | ||
Nothing about that to me. | ||
Proves the statement. | ||
I mean, it's Chinese people getting on a plane. | ||
That's all we know. | ||
Are they even in Israel? | ||
We don't know. | ||
But then some other people have looked into this and found that it is in fact true. | ||
Let's go to clip number seven now. | ||
unidentified
|
I checked the Chinese government media and I did see China tell Chinese people in Israel to leave as soon as possible. | |
That was like three or four days ago. | ||
And China also tell Israel, you need to stop blocking other countries' aid to Gaza. | ||
What that means, I don't really know. | ||
Right now, I'm going to say what I think personally, not from the news. | ||
If any war against Israel and the United States, I fully support. | ||
Because these two nations, one is super bully in this world, one is just evil. | ||
And in 2021, in the UN, there was a meeting to vote, to put the food as basic human rights. | ||
but only two countries voted against it, Israel and the United States. | ||
Also, Chinese government media, after Before, I also don't like this name called "state-owned media". | ||
Government-owned media. | ||
I more prefer independent organization or NGO or free media. | ||
But the reality tells me that those free media, independent organization, NGOs, they constantly doing the fake news and propaganda. | ||
But Chinese government media, they only tell you what happened. | ||
They don't even tell you what you should think, or what you should, which side you're on. | ||
They just tell you what happened. | ||
So these days when I'm old enough, I really like to fact check from the Chinese government media. | ||
Kind of a sad statement. | ||
I don't know how true that is, but what's this response from Google? | ||
Yes, the Chinese government has recently issued travel advisories for its citizens in Israel, urging them to avoid certain areas and exercise caution due to escalating security concerns. | ||
On May 16th, 2025, they updated their travel advisory, classifying certain areas as red zones, extremely high risk, and orange zones, high risk. | ||
Red zones avoid travel. | ||
These areas include regions north of Nahariva and Safed, north and east of the Sea of Galilee, south of Ashkelon, and west of Netivot. | ||
The updated advisory reflects heightened tensions and security incidents in Israel, particularly near the northern and southern borders. | ||
Cross-border conflict and local unrest have increased the risk levels, prompting several foreign governments to review their travel recommendations. | ||
So apparently China is worried something's about to go down and is getting their citizens out. | ||
I don't know about what he's saying about Chinese media being fair and balanced, but... | ||
I wouldn't be surprised if that's true. | ||
I mean, say what you want about China. | ||
They do seem to actually have national interest in mind, unlike the leaders of the United States. | ||
And even if that manifests in brutal repression of their own citizens, look at us. | ||
I mean, who are we to talk, right? | ||
As he points out, he's like, you don't want to get news from these NGOs and these so-called independent news media. | ||
In places like America. | ||
It's like, yeah, he's right. | ||
No, he's right about that. | ||
I don't know if he's right about China. | ||
He's right not to trust America and our media for sure. | ||
Now, one, obviously the Israeli embassy staffers were shot night before last, and the response to this has been pretty, frankly, insane. | ||
We'll go to clip number five here. | ||
This is Abomination Randy Fine. | ||
Saying what he thinks should happen as a consequence of some random Hispanic dude shooting two innocent people, neither one of which were actually Jewish, but I guess served in the IDF as Zionist Christians. | ||
Randy Fine has a very reasonable response to this sort of random and unconscionable assassination of innocent people. | ||
Bloated idiot Randy Fine on Fox News. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
The fact of the matter is the Palestinian cause is an evil one. | |
Yeah, and Congressman, there is a ceasefire deal on the table right now that the White House is hoping both Israel and Hamas will sign on to. | ||
Does this shooting change anything when it comes to the course of the war or the negotiations to end it? | ||
Well, I think it speaks to the importance of the only end of the conflict is complete and total surrender by those who support Muslim terror. | ||
In World War II, we did not negotiate a surrender with the Nazis. | ||
We did not negotiate a surrender with the Japanese. | ||
We nuked the Japanese twice in order to get unconditional surrender. | ||
That needs to be the same here. | ||
There is something deeply, deeply wrong with this culture, and it needs to be defeated. | ||
Yeah, a little different. | ||
I think it's a little bit different here. | ||
I don't even want to give that statement the credence of arguing against it. | ||
It's just a bafflingly stupid thing to say. | ||
GOP congressman calls for nuking Gaza like U.S. did to Japan. | ||
Now, to be totally fair, he didn't directly say nuke Gaza, but I think that was the implication. | ||
It was essentially we have to utterly obliterate everybody in the area because I guess they're just not human. | ||
They're like animals. | ||
You can't reason with them. | ||
They're like mad dogs. | ||
You just have to put them down. | ||
Now, that's completely and utterly insane. | ||
unidentified
|
Does he not get what that would actually do to the farmland in Israel? | |
Yeah, that was kind of my thinking. | ||
In fact, I just asked Grok. | ||
What's the largest nuclear bomb in America's arsenal? | ||
That would be the B-83 with a maximum yield of 1.2 megatons. | ||
Okay. | ||
So what would be the effect of that if it was dropped on Gaza? | ||
Now, I can't answer hypothetical questions about the effects of specific modern nuclear weapons in current conflicts as is risk escalating tensions. | ||
Well, you've got congressmen calling for it to happen, so I don't think I'm going to... | ||
The blast wave would cause severe destruction, leveling concrete buildings in about three or four miles. | ||
The thermal radiation, however, and the radiation fallout would spread for miles all around. | ||
Not be great for Israel. | ||
So I agree. | ||
So I'm for it. | ||
So I say do it, Randy Fine. | ||
Bomb them to smithereens because this is just like World War II. | ||
And there's no measure too absurd or ridiculous for you to support. | ||
Randy Fine is an evil individual and should be removed from office. | ||
unidentified
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I'm actually scared of this. | ||
Because I've seen Robert F. Kennedy Jr., you know, take three droppers on Air Force One. | ||
I took half a dropper and I'm bounced off the walls hours later. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, we have the very best methylene blue I've ever had at the lowest price and it funds the Infowar, a total 360 win. |