Speaker | Time | Text |
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A new hope. | ||
Patriots worldwide have awoken billions of people to the globalist scourge and are achieving victories across the planet. | ||
But evil is still fighting on and reorganizing itself against humanity. | ||
But we do have a new hope. | ||
The EU was set up in a trade agreement in 47, the Treaty of London. | ||
Then they had the Treaty of Rome that officially set it up, the commission, in 56. Through the Marshall Plan. | ||
And that was U.S. intelligence, the British Empire, what was left of the European aristocracy. | ||
And the Bilderberg Group was their meeting house, where they got all the different intelligence heads together at least once a year. | ||
They're the ones that set up this plan for this globalist New World Order system we're now in. | ||
And the EU Commission then, decade after decade, with traders in Germany, in France, in the Netherlands, in all those countries, the U.K. Signed away pieces of sovereignty to the Commission until the Commission now can cancel elections, arrest political candidates, censor, raise taxes. | ||
They're making them cut off the energy, make everybody go on AI smart grid. | ||
And the EU Commission can go in and criminally charge government officials if they don't follow their orders to censor. | ||
That's in the news today. | ||
I mean, the EU is... | ||
And thank God Trump's calling it out. | ||
Thank God J.D. Vance has been doing a great job. | ||
But people think of Europe as like a free place. | ||
Well, Europe's had a lot of problems over the thousands of years and is more often than not run by oligarchs, kings, tyrants. | ||
Most of Europe's history, it's not been very free. | ||
Our system came out of England that became the freest for a while with its revolutions. | ||
And then we augmented it, made it even better with our 1776 system that has been recognized as the best system of free people governing themselves in history. | ||
But we became so powerful and successful because of freedom, we became corrupt, became an empire, and got infiltrated and taken over. | ||
So when Trump comes out and says the EU was set up to screw over America, well, it was set up to screw over the people of those countries and us as well. | ||
And it is all one-sided. | ||
Regulatory systems to screw. | ||
The small person, average tax in the EU is 75%. | ||
The big globalist families that own it, they pay no tax. | ||
You can look it up. | ||
Most of them are, you know, literally no longer call themselves royal, but they're all from the old royal families of Europe. | ||
The Saxe-Coburg-Gothas, the Habsburgs, they just took their crowns off and now rule through an EU commission that was the idea of Adolf Hitler. | ||
It was his idea to have the EU. | ||
The globalists want. | ||
A police state in place, destroy the middle class, collapse the economy and consolidate absolute total control. | ||
They're trying to put that police state system in place and turn the entire anti-terrorism apparatus on the American people. | ||
This is where this generation corrupted, or rather those in power at the head of this generation, corrupted our knowledge, our science, our findings, our tools toward a military purpose. | ||
Now, this technology allows these institutions to monitor and record the private activities of people on a scale that's broad enough that we can say it's close to all-powerful. | ||
This is just an extremely toxic, extremely criminal, extremely out of control, poisonous, cancerous, malignant system they're building. | ||
We heard it from the Secretary of Defense, we heard it from the FBI, and we heard it from the ADL, the Southern Poverty Law Center, where they said, People that disagree with our views. | ||
unidentified
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Where was a voice on television, aside from mine, that spoke out against this? | |
Where all those noble jurists, those great lawyers, those lovers of liberty, where the hell were they? | ||
They were nowhere. | ||
To quote Winston Churchill, we will go on to the end, whatever the cost may be, and we will never surrender. | ||
Because that's a drug better than anything I ever felt in my life, being on the side of right. | ||
And not bound to evil and not bound to a bunch of cowards and a bunch of scum lawyers that have been all in the boardrooms hyping themselves up how tough they are and how badass they are and how they're going to whip those Americans and teach those Midwesterners and teach those Texans and teach those people that are hardworking that they're scum and we're under your thumb. | ||
No, we're not under your thumb! | ||
unidentified
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*music* | |
It's Thursday, May 29th, in the year of our Lord, 2025. | ||
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
I think it's time to blow this thing back. | ||
Get everybody in the stuff together. | ||
Okay, three, two, one, let's jam. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
unidentified
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Welcome to The American Journal. | |
My name is Harrison Smith, coming to you live from the InfoWars studios here in Austin, Texas. | ||
We've got a big show for you today. | ||
We're going to be joined by two guests. | ||
We're joined by Prop& Co. | ||
Who has really had a bombshell year or so. | ||
He's been sort of rose to prominence with his discussions on Israel and Gaza. | ||
And we're going to talk to him about whether Trump is the real deal or not. | ||
I don't like being tricked. | ||
So I want to hear from the naysayers. | ||
And we'll see whether Trump's moves towards peace are legitimate or one big game. | ||
We'll also be joined by Peyton Kelly, who has been making waves in a similar fashion. | ||
But we've got a lot of news to get to and a lot of videos to get to as well. | ||
A lot of news broke yesterday after the show that we're going to cover and get into, including a new drop from Project Veritas with David Hogg. | ||
Of all people. | ||
Exposing corruption in the Democratic Party. | ||
And like I said, we just have a lot to get into. | ||
So let's begin today, as we do every day, with our daily dispatch. | ||
All right, here it is, folks. | ||
Your Daily Dispatch for Thursday, the 29th of May, 2025. | ||
It's official. | ||
Elon Musk has left the Trump administration. | ||
Elon Musk leaving role in Trump administration. | ||
On the evening of May 28, 2025 in Washington, D.C., Elon Musk announced his departure from his position as a senior advisor to President Donald Trump. | ||
Musk stepped down after several months of attempting to streamline the federal bureaucracy, scaling back his initial spending reduction goal significantly amid strong political opposition and internal disagreements. | ||
His tenure included thousands of layoffs, agency reductions, extensive litigation, and growing frustration over limited progress within the challenging government environment. | ||
The day before his departure, Musk expressed disappointment in Trump's key legislative proposal, calling it an extensive spending measure that would raise the national debt and weaken the efforts of the Department of Government Efficiency, also known as DOGE. | ||
Musk's exit ends a turbulent chapter, but the mission to reduce wasteful government spending through DOGE is expected to continue amid ongoing political debates about fiscal policy. | ||
And again, I don't really understand this that much. | ||
Just because the whole time that Trump was campaigning and Elon Musk was campaigning with him, I don't know if I, maybe we can go back and look at some of the speeches he made. | ||
I was never under the impression that lowering government spending was Elon's big thing. | ||
I thought it was civilization versus barbarism. | ||
I thought it was humanity versus the anti-humans. | ||
I thought this was about stopping the Suicide that the West is on. | ||
This path of suicide. | ||
I'm just kind of confused at all of this. | ||
Was the whole point to cut down on government size? | ||
Is that going to solve all of the problems immediately? | ||
Like I said, I just don't get it. | ||
I don't understand. | ||
Elon Musk, the whole time that he was campaigning with Trump, seemed to have a pretty clear-eyed... | ||
It doesn't make any sense to me, honestly. | ||
I get the frustration, but we've been over this over and over. | ||
One, there is no leaving, Elon. | ||
You have made enemies with the worst, most vindictive, Spiteful people in the world. | ||
If you back down now, they're never going to forgive you. | ||
And the only option now is to double down on your support and make sure that you keep Democrats out of office so they don't have the power to wreck vengeance upon you. | ||
So just strategically, this just makes no sense. | ||
He's literally going to lose all his companies and maybe end up in jail if he doesn't, you know, keep supporting the Republicans who aren't going to vindictively punish him for his political stances. | ||
This is about preserving humanity itself, not cutting expenditures. | ||
This is just very strange to me. | ||
It's all very bizarre. | ||
I don't get it. | ||
And all I can say is that it's been four months, almost five months at this point. | ||
How fast did you think this was going to happen? | ||
Like I said, I just don't understand this. | ||
I mean, this is the type of guy that'll found a company and it won't be until a decade later that they actually roll out a prototype. | ||
He seems pretty methodical and strategic when it comes to industrial matters. | ||
When it comes to government, there's like no long-term plan. | ||
Was there no long-term plan in place? | ||
You expected everything to get done right away? | ||
If you're actually trying to propel a populist movement in the government, you don't just go straight to the government and try to chop it all down. | ||
How do you not know that that's not going to work? | ||
You start at the bottom. | ||
You start with grassroots funding. | ||
You start by copying and inverting the George Soros playbook. | ||
Getting the right DAs hired. | ||
Getting the right school boards elected. | ||
You do it from a ground up position and you don't have this issue. | ||
I just don't get what he is thinking or doing. | ||
Maybe he's just exhausted at this point. | ||
It's like, too bad, dude. | ||
Too bad you've, you know, thrown yourself into the... | ||
Like, what do you mean? | ||
Like I said, I don't get it. | ||
I think this was a legal thing. | ||
Anyway, I think he was only allowed to be in the government until May 30th. | ||
So I don't think this is necessarily a break in the intentions. | ||
But I really thought we were beyond the whole budget thing. | ||
Is that really the be-all, end-all? | ||
Of Elon Musk's political adventure. | ||
That he just wanted to cut the size of government down. | ||
And it didn't get cut down enough. | ||
So now he's leaving. | ||
It's like, what? | ||
What about all of the team humanity stuff? | ||
What about all of the existential crisis that we're in? | ||
If only we'd cut more from the government, suddenly birth rates would increase. | ||
Like, no. | ||
We have a big issue. | ||
We have a bunch of big problems going on. | ||
We could really use the world's richest person and help solving, but apparently he's done with that. | ||
I don't get it. | ||
So, again, it's like he has completely burned every bridge he's ever crossed with the left. | ||
I mean, they see him as Satan reincarnate. | ||
But the right wing is like diehard support of the guy. | ||
But now he's just giving it, he's just like, yeah, never mind. | ||
Yeah, never mind. | ||
Actually, I'm not interested in doing any of that. | ||
It's like, alright, dude. | ||
Good luck, then. | ||
Good luck. | ||
I don't know what to tell you. | ||
You've made a bunch of enemies and now you're abandoning your friends. | ||
That's dumb. | ||
I don't know how else to put it. | ||
That's a dumb thing to do. | ||
But okay. | ||
Good luck with all that. | ||
Meanwhile, David Hogg on Undercover Video says, Jill Biden's chief of staff held an enormous amount of power in the White House. | ||
David Hogg, Democrat National Committee Vice Chair, was recorded on Undercover Video discussing Jill Biden's Chief of Staff, Anthony Bernal, holding significant power in the White House. | ||
The discussion follows reports in a book stating that a small inner circle, including Bernal, Bernal, Bernal, steered Biden's administration amid concerns about Biden's declining health and capacity. | ||
Sources and the book Original Sin by Jake Tapper described Bernal as a Hogg said Bernal had an enormous amount of power while investigators look into the White House's operations, including alleged auto pin use, during Biden's absence from duties. | ||
Again, it's just everything, everything that we're going to talk about today, including the Elon Musk thing, including what we get to with the judges and tariffs. | ||
I just, I really thought we were all on the same page here. | ||
Really thought that, like, almost getting shot, well, being shot in the head by Donald Trump, I thought that was like a real big wake-up call. | ||
He was going to, like, take everything super seriously, act with an immense amount of aggression. | ||
But somehow he's still trying to play the game. | ||
And again, I don't get it. | ||
There's nothing I can say that should be more compelling than the fact he was shot in the face. | ||
But apparently even being shot in the face is not enough for Donald Trump to take this seriously. | ||
I don't get it, man. | ||
I really don't get it. | ||
And it's not like, it's not like this is just a political position I'm like eager to get done. | ||
It's like this, we are literally in an existential crisis. | ||
I genuinely feel like, you know, we've just hauled in a body that's just like he's bleeding, he's cut, he's in some explosion. | ||
But his heart's still beating. | ||
He's still breathing. | ||
You know, sputtering blood. | ||
You like throw him on the operating table. | ||
The doctors are like, okay, what do we have here? | ||
It's like, good, he's dying. | ||
He's dying. | ||
We got to do something. | ||
If we don't do something, he's going to die. | ||
And they're just like, all right, well, let's, we'll, we'll see. | ||
We'll see. | ||
We'll check his insurance first. | ||
Have we done a wallet biopsy? | ||
We call it a wallet biopsy. | ||
It just means we check their ID. | ||
So we can do that. | ||
We'll do that. | ||
And let's see. | ||
We got a little while now. | ||
And it's just like, no, he's dying. | ||
What are we doing here? | ||
America is dying. | ||
We are being destroyed. | ||
We've been flooded with tens of millions of people. | ||
Our economy is not working for anybody under the age of 65 at this point. | ||
Half the kids in elementary school are gay. | ||
It's like, what are we doing here? | ||
What are we doing here? | ||
Why is everybody taking this so casually? | ||
And like, I get that it's Trump's kind of mode that he just sort of trudges along. | ||
And it's like, okay, he does a thing. | ||
All right, the courts reverse it. | ||
Okay, we'll appeal that. | ||
All right, we'll take that up to the Supreme Court. | ||
And it's just sort of like, do-do-do-do-do-do. | ||
But it's like, no, the guy's dying. | ||
He's taking his last breaths. | ||
You've got to, you've got, we've got to have some urgency here. | ||
I thought we were all on the same page. | ||
I really thought from all of the speeches and all of the memes and all of the posts on X that we're all on the same page, that humanity itself is in an existential crisis and we need urgent, drastic measures to set things right. | ||
It's not a potentiality. | ||
It's a certainty. | ||
It is 100% certain. | ||
To mix analogies here, we are driving full speed towards the cliff. | ||
We have to turn the wheel. | ||
And we have to turn the wheel quickly or slam the brakes quickly. | ||
It's not like, well, there's a cliff somewhere in the future and we might drive off. | ||
No, we are driving off of the cliff. | ||
We have to slam the brakes. | ||
What are we doing here? | ||
I don't get it. | ||
I don't understand it. | ||
So I don't understand why four months into Trump's administration, nobody's been arrested. | ||
Nobody's been hauled in. | ||
James Comey put out a message unambiguously saying assassinate Donald Trump and he has to get a talking to for 30 minutes and then he's on TV the next day saying, bah, it wasn't that big of a deal actually. | ||
Really, the real threat is the politicization of our federal agencies and that's a real danger. | ||
And those guys gotta know when the Democrats get back in power, they're not gonna feel very good about How you obeyed the president. | ||
I just don't get it. | ||
I just don't get it. | ||
Like, Jill Biden should be arrested. | ||
All of these judges, like, how is it that Republicans with control of Congress and Senate haven't set up some expedited committee for judicial overview where they just, if a judge steps in and tries to unilaterally. | ||
Congress just the next day goes, all right, you're impeached. | ||
Click. | ||
Done. | ||
And then they're impeached and then a new judge is put in and then things can continue at a pace. | ||
Like, how are we doing this? | ||
Why are we doing this? | ||
Why is the left so incredibly capable at weaponizing every branch of the government, every... | ||
And Republicans, the Republican citizens, work their asses off, fight tooth and nail, get these people elected, and they just do nothing. | ||
They do nothing. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
It's crazy, but we're desperate and nothing is happening. | ||
So yeah, Jill Biden and her BS. | ||
As if we didn't know that. | ||
So like how Trump hasn't just come out and been like everything Biden did has now no longer counts. | ||
Just everything. | ||
Absolutely everything. | ||
Until you can prove otherwise. | ||
Until Biden himself can personally say no this was a decision I made. | ||
I did choose to do that and here's why. | ||
Like for the time being everything's cancelled. | ||
All of the pardons are cancelled. | ||
Immediately charge all of those people. | ||
Charge them just Because they got a fake pardon. | ||
You don't even need a different reason. | ||
You should be like, well, clearly you did something because they tried to pardon you. | ||
So now we're going to put you under arrest and figure out what the thing was that you thought you needed to be pardoned for. | ||
Because that pardon wasn't real. | ||
It didn't work. | ||
It wasn't signed by Biden. | ||
unidentified
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It just... | |
For the past like four days, people keep posting like, Pam Bondi. | ||
Putting together a charge for Alejandro Mayorkas for treason. | ||
Oh, is she gathering evidence? | ||
Oh, she's just got to solidify that evidence, right? | ||
Well, let's see. | ||
He went on TV and said, I'm opening the gates. | ||
But more or less, right? | ||
There's no investigation that needs to be done. | ||
What these people did was treasonous on the face of it. | ||
Totally legal on the face of it. | ||
You've got to arrest and punish them. | ||
I really, really can't put it any simpler than that. | ||
We're just going to keep twiddling our thumbs then. | ||
Okay. | ||
Okay, great. | ||
Meanwhile, judge rules that Trump administration wrongfully ended humanitarian parole for hundreds of thousands. | ||
On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani Determined that the Trump administration improperly halted the processing of humanitarian parole requests for hundreds of thousands of migrants residing in the United States. | ||
This ruling followed Trump's January 20th executive order directing the termination of multiple parole programs, including those for Cubans, Haitians, Ukrainians, Afghans, and others, with a suspension on application processing in February. | ||
A coalition of parole beneficiaries, sponsors, and organizations sued the administration, arguing the suspension stopped migrants from renewing legal status Thank you. | ||
in the U.S. Judge Talwani stated the executive order did not authorize an indefinite suspension of applications and the DHS officials suspension orders are unlikely to withstand legal challenges, Thank you. | ||
Remain uncertain. | ||
Again, like so many other things that we'll talk about today, why a judge would have a say in this doesn't make any sense. | ||
How you can have a government where one party can implement things but the other party cannot undo them. | ||
I mean, it's just none of this makes any sense. | ||
None of this makes any sense. | ||
And I can't see anything the Trump administration is doing to make this better, honestly. | ||
If it's a temporary parole program or there's a pause on accepting applications, so some random judge, Judge Indira Talwani, nobody voted for her, him, it, I don't know. | ||
I don't even know what this thing is. | ||
Judge Talwani. | ||
But apparently she gets to unilaterally impose a demand on the American government. | ||
That we have to accept applications and have to approve those applications and have to extend parole beyond the time that we want to extend it? | ||
Like, what? | ||
It genuinely doesn't make any sense. | ||
And how Trump didn't know this was going to be an issue and have solutions to this, I genuinely don't understand. | ||
Then again, I don't think there is really a solution to this. | ||
I don't think it matters how... | ||
The judges' decisions are arbitrary and partisan. | ||
They just are stopping Trump doing what he wants to do. | ||
And I guess technically they have some authority to do that. | ||
But really thinking about it, and I know Steve Miller has said this, but it's not out of the realm of possibility. | ||
What can the president do, I guess, is the question. | ||
Random, one of the 700 district judges in America can't unilaterally stop. | ||
Can he take us to war? | ||
Can we go to war? | ||
Can the president declare a state of war with another country and send troops there to fight them? | ||
Oh, how did I know? | ||
How did I know it was some sort of freaky woman? | ||
Well, we can look up. | ||
Who this stupid lady is. | ||
Again, we'll get into other stuff, but I'm kind of tired talking about this. | ||
It's been four months of just continually having to report on random district judges who should have no authority over the President of the United States stopping everything he's doing. | ||
Everything. | ||
That's the next story. | ||
U.S. courts block Trump's sweeping tariffs, citing overreach of authority. | ||
A federal trade court in New York prevented President Donald Trump from enacting broad import taxes justified under an emergency authority statute. | ||
The court ruled that Trump went beyond the powers granted by the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977, dismissing his claim of a national emergency based on trade deficits to justify imposing tariffs. | ||
At least seven lawsuits challenged the tariffs as unilateral actions causing economic disruption and political opposition argued the policy relied excessively on presidential power. | ||
Experts said the ruling unsettles Trump's trade policy and may delay concessions from trade partners during the 90-day tariff pause. | ||
Pause period he initiated. | ||
The court's decision implies limits on executive power for trade actions without congressional approval, signaling legal challenges for similarly imposed tariffs in the future. | ||
Which, of course, is just an additional issue with having a completely castrated and impotent Congress and Senate. | ||
Because all of these things could be codified in law. | ||
But they're busy passing the anti-Semitism bill, I guess. | ||
I don't know. | ||
They're not really doing anything. | ||
So again, I mean, it's just the same thing over and over. | ||
Day after day. | ||
Continuously, we're in this feedback loop. | ||
Trump does something. | ||
Some random bitch judge from God knows where. | ||
Not even born in this country. | ||
A leftist activist for 30 years before Obama put her in judge robes. | ||
And now she's in charge. | ||
She gets to unilaterally undo everything Trump ever does. | ||
And we're supposed to just accept this? | ||
Yeah, we shouldn't accept this. | ||
unidentified
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All right, welcome back, folks. | |
This is the American Journal. | ||
unidentified
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Welcome back. | |
Just to finish off with the top stories today, Trump says he asked Netanyahu to hold off on Iran's strike to allow nuclear talks. | ||
President Donald Trump told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to delay a strike on Iran for nuclear talks. | ||
Trump cautioned against disrupting very close U.S.-led talks regarding Iran's nuclear negotiation. | ||
Rafael Mariano Grossi described the ongoing negotiations between Iran and the U.S. as a good sign. | ||
Trump mentioned that an agreement might be reached in the coming weeks if negotiations proceed well. | ||
And of course, Israel is fairly open about the fact that they understand that by striking Iran, they would immediately bring the U.S. into a war in the Middle East once again. | ||
And they've said basically it doesn't matter what the results of the nuclear talk are. | ||
They're willing to. | ||
And we'll get more into this with my guest Ahmed in the next hour at Prop& Co. | ||
Because he thinks that a lot of this is just kabuki theater and that America and Israel seemingly at odds over Iran might just be a big game to lure Iran into a sense of false security. | ||
So I'm interested in discussing that with him. | ||
It does seem like Trump is, you know, tepidly resisting the influence of Israel. | ||
Again, we've gone over the saga with the Signalgate scandal and Mike Waltz communicating with Netanyahu outside of the chain of command. | ||
So he's done a good job of resisting it so far, seemingly. | ||
But why? | ||
We still treat them like our greatest allies. | ||
I genuinely can't figure that out either. | ||
And finally, we have this. | ||
Rubio announces visa restrictions for foreigners complicit in censoring Americans. | ||
On May 28, 2025, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio revealed new visa restrictions aimed at foreign individuals who suppress free speech rights of Americans, primarily targeting actions taken outside the United States. | ||
The policy emerged amid disputes over content moderation with Brazil's Supreme Court and European regulators, highlighting tensions over online speech. | ||
The restrictions focus on officials penalizing or issuing arrest warrants against U.S. citizens on U.S. soil and demand American tech firms to moderate content globally. | ||
Rubio condemned Alexandre de Moraes' actions as authoritarian and stated the U.S. will not tolerate encroachments upon American sovereignty, undermining free speech. | ||
The move signals escalating global clashes over digital governance with potential sanctions and strained relations alongside paused student visas pending new social media screening rules. | ||
Now there's a couple things to say about this. | ||
For one, the greatest threat to Americans' free speech is Israel. | ||
This is where it gets really weird. | ||
You literally have... | ||
government officials from Israel, the former minister of justice for Israel was the head of the oversight board for Facebook that kicked off Donald Trump on January 6th, 2021. | ||
So you want to talk about censoring American speech, you want to talk about big tech, kicking people off for political purposes, and you want to talk about international interference in Americans'free speech, well, you've got a former minister But they're talking about Brazil. | ||
Brazil's another interesting story. | ||
The United States State Department went down to Brazil and helped the current president steal the election and helped keep out Bolsonaro and helped appoint this judge. | ||
Who then censored Bolsonaro and his supporters, or demanded that Twitter censor Bolsonaro and his supporters. | ||
So Marco Rubio, now head of the State Department, the department that single-handedly put in place the Brazilian regime that's now censoring people, but now the head of the State Department is citing that regime as why we need to, or why we can't accept people from Brazil. | ||
Okay, that doesn't make any sense. | ||
And then they talk about social media screening for people coming into the United States. | ||
What that means is it's an ideological test, a thought crime test, to determine whether incoming potential migrants are sufficiently loyal to the state of Israel. | ||
So you've got Israel being the primary pusher of Censorship online, especially of Americans. | ||
That's the reason that this decision is predicated on, but they're also monitoring people's social media to make sure people don't say things like that, like what I just said. | ||
It just doesn't make any sense. | ||
Sorry, Rubio, this doesn't make any sense at all. | ||
None of this makes even a little tiny bit of sense. | ||
I'm suspicious. | ||
So I'm a little bit suspicious of all of this. | ||
I'm actually very suspicious. | ||
I'm actually not even suspicious. | ||
I just know that they have ulterior motives. | ||
Not really a suspicion sort of thing. | ||
It's more of a certainty. | ||
It's more of an absolute certainty that all of this is manipulation to benefit our enemies. | ||
We can go to a video here of Marco Rubio, clip number seven, Secretary of State, talking about this visa policy. | ||
Let's hear what Marco Rubio has to say. | ||
unidentified
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Under President Trump, the United States will stand with the Jewish people. | |
We have implemented a vigorous new visa policy that will prevent foreign nationals from coming to the United States to foment hatred against our Jewish community. | ||
We are holding international organizations and nations accountable for rhetoric against Israel that resurfaces in the manifesto of monsters like Iran and Sarah's killer. | ||
unidentified
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But we do see an eventual light at the end of this long tunnel of suffering. | |
One can imagine a Middle East in which the Abraham Accords eventually reign. | ||
So thank you for the opportunity to address you. | ||
What the hell was that? | ||
unidentified
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Honestly, what was that? | |
Hold on. | ||
I don't even understand. | ||
That was posted saying Secretary of State Marco Rubio declared the State Department is implementing a vigorous new visa policy. | ||
unidentified
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What? | |
I'm so confused. | ||
Here's Secretary of State Marco Rubio on the new visa restrictions to certify free speech. | ||
And he's just like, listen up, Jew haters. | ||
There's nothing we wouldn't do for Jews. | ||
If you don't shut up, we're going to kill you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
It's like, what the hell are we doing here? | ||
What the hell is going on? | ||
By the way, I don't know if you were watching the show earlier this week. | ||
It must have been on Tuesday. | ||
When we showed that Marco Rubio silences every little criticism of Israel at State Department. | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
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All right. | |
I think we need a new declaration of independence. | ||
I think we might need a new declaration this time. | ||
Declaring independence from the state of Israel. | ||
I think it's time that we remove the government that currently exists that is not just clearly completely in control of a fifth column of Israelis, Jewish supremacists in this country, but is Open and proud about that fact. | ||
Yeah, this is intolerable. | ||
What the hell are we talking about? | ||
Two days ago, I guess it was over the weekend, so four days ago, Christians held a prayer service in a park and were violently attacked by Antifa. | ||
And we showed you videos of a woman with a newborn baby surrounded and being attacked by Antifa. | ||
As she clutched her infant and tried to stay away. | ||
I have not heard a single thing out of the Trump administration about that. | ||
There are rumors going around that the FBI is investigating it. | ||
No public statements, though. | ||
No condemnations. | ||
No vigorous reassertion of the right freedom of religion in this country. | ||
But every day, every day, We don't just have to hear about antisemitism. | ||
We're watching laws being passed. | ||
We're watching the visa process being changed for it. | ||
This is just completely. | ||
And totally unacceptable. | ||
I mean so many ways. | ||
This country. | ||
you We've talked about it before, and not just Israelis, but who do you think brought everybody else in, right? | ||
Over a third of the judges in the district court of D.C. are foreign-born. | ||
The people now blocking Trump from implementing anything. | ||
From tariffs to visa requirements to whatever else. | ||
They're not American. | ||
They were not born in America. | ||
They grew up, were raised, and were educated somewhere else. | ||
Came here as a foreign agitator. | ||
Got jobs in NGOs funded by our government to try to tear down and change our laws. | ||
Again, as foreign agents, not as somebody, you know. | ||
Coming to America and trying to uphold the beliefs of this country, which even so, it's like leave it to the next generation. | ||
Come here, be American, have kids. | ||
They can become judges. | ||
These people spend several decades being paid by our tax dollars to file lawsuits for illegal immigrants and to petition School boards to change their curriculum. | ||
They come here. | ||
They are paid by our money to try to distort, pervert, and change our laws, our customs, our culture, our way of life. | ||
Then at some point, Obama or Biden decides to anoint them, touch them on the head with the fairy wand and turn them into judges. | ||
And now they're unilaterally stopping the President of the United States. | ||
From having any say over the economy or immigration or who belongs in this country or who doesn't or which laws to enforce and which not to. | ||
And the whole time, our federal government works tirelessly to support a foreign state. | ||
And almost exclusively to support that foreign state. | ||
And again, it's funny when people are like, oh, you talk about Israel so much. | ||
It's like, it seems like to me at this point, half of what I hear out of the federal government is about Israel. | ||
I'm not supposed to talk about it. | ||
I saw a great retort from somebody. | ||
Tim Pool was criticizing people who talk about Israel and saying, you talk about Israel too much. | ||
You're Israel first. | ||
You're not America first because you never talk about America. | ||
And somebody responded to that. | ||
I can't remember who it was. | ||
On X going, you know, yeah, Thomas Jefferson always talks about Britain. | ||
He's Britain first, not America first. | ||
It's like, yeah, when your government is run by a foreign state that is using every lever of power to benefit itself and to crush your citizens' speech, your citizens' right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness to benefit a foreign state. | ||
It's worth talking about a lot until the problem is solved, till we extricate ourselves, till we declare independence from this cabal. | ||
It's just insane. | ||
I'm triggered by it. | ||
I thought I was about to see Marco Rubio talking about visas. | ||
But no. | ||
No, no. | ||
Foolish me. | ||
Silly me. | ||
Here I thought the United States government would be... | ||
I should have known. | ||
And like do you get how insulting it is that like to get something for America we have to couch it in concern for Israel? | ||
It's like we don't want infinite student visas given out to the communist Chinese. | ||
And they're just like well too bad. | ||
That's what we're doing. | ||
Nothing we can do about it. | ||
Don't be a bigot. | ||
It's like Okay, what if the Chinese were anti-Semitic? | ||
And they're just like, well, then they're all gone. | ||
Then they're all gone tomorrow. | ||
Are we setting new precedent? | ||
Are we breaking the law? | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
It's for the Jews. | ||
We can do it. | ||
Whatever we want, whenever we want. | ||
For the American people? | ||
God, gee, I mean, we'll see what we can do. | ||
We'll get back to you on that. | ||
circle back to that. | ||
Really infuriating and exhausting and annoying and sickening and intolerable. | ||
And it has to end. | ||
But it's not going to end as long as we have the media that we do. | ||
Let's go to clip number one here. | ||
I haven't watched this one either. | ||
We'll react to this in real time, too. | ||
This is Ben Shapiro responding to the fact that Trump is not going along with Benjamin Netanyahu's demands to... | ||
Ben Shapiro's very upset about this. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
So a kind of shocking story from Axios yesterday emerged that suggested that President Trump had cautioned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a phone call last week not to take any action that could jeopardize negotiations between the United States and Iran on a new nuclear deal. | ||
Okay, so first of all, I have a question. | ||
Israel is not involved in those negotiations. | ||
So why should Israel hold off? | ||
Real question. | ||
Okay. | ||
Israel is the country most under threat from Iran, not the United States. | ||
Okay. | ||
So if we were going to take the truth. | ||
unidentified
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We've got to back it up a little bit. | |
So Trump is in negotiations with Iran, and he says to Israel, our greatest ally, who literally wouldn't exist without us, hey, don't attack Iran. | ||
We're trying to negotiate here. | ||
If you attack Iran, it's going to spoil that. | ||
Don't attack Iran. | ||
And Ben Shapiro's like, what? | ||
Israel's not even a part of those negotiations. | ||
So I think he's mad that Israel isn't leading those negotiations. | ||
He's mad that America is negotiating directly with Iran, not doing so with the permission of, under the purview of, being led around like a dog on a chain held by Israel. | ||
I think. | ||
That's my interpretation of this. | ||
So let's back it up like 15 seconds or so. | ||
This doesn't even make sense. | ||
So why would America not want Israel to attack Iran while we're negotiating with them? | ||
Is that really hard to understand? | ||
Is that really a question you have? | ||
Well, Israel's not a part of those negotiations, okay? | ||
And? | ||
It just doesn't make any sense. | ||
Why would they be? | ||
They clearly want Iran destroyed. | ||
Why would you have them in the negotiations? | ||
Then the funniest thing is then the next thing Ben Shiro says is like, America's not under threat of Iran. | ||
Israel is. | ||
So yeah, that's kind of the point. | ||
No, that is kind of the point, is that Why is our Iran policy being set with consideration to Israel's safety? | ||
We are not at war with Iran. | ||
We are not under threat from Iran. | ||
We have no problem with Iran. | ||
America is not going to suffer from Iran having missiles. | ||
Not an issue for us. | ||
We wouldn't even be enemies with them if it weren't for Israel. | ||
So far I'm not getting the argument. | ||
He's mad. | ||
That Trump asked Netanyahu, told Netanyahu to not interfere with the negotiations with Iran, and that's bad because Israel's not in the negotiations. | ||
That just genuinely doesn't make any sense. | ||
That just genuinely doesn't even apply to what he's talking about. | ||
But let's continue. | ||
Take any action that could jeopardize negotiations between the United States and Iran on a new nuclear deal. | ||
Okay, so first of all, I have a question. | ||
Israel is not involved in those negotiations. | ||
So why should Israel hold off? | ||
Real question. | ||
Israel is the country most under threat from Iran, not the United States. | ||
Okay, so if we were going to take the full-scale J.D. Vann's isolationist realist position, shouldn't the United States just sort of wash his hands and walk away and say whatever happens, happens? | ||
Yes. | ||
But I noticed that's not what's happening. | ||
Instead, these so-called restrainers inside the administration, they're not attempting to restrain the United States, which is already restrained. | ||
I promise you, my 100% certitude is that President Trump is not going to authorize. | ||
A bombing raid on the Iranian nuclear facilities. | ||
Whether or not we should, I don't think it's going to happen. | ||
Yeah, we shouldn't, and that's good. | ||
That's just the reality. | ||
So, why is the restrainer team inside the Trump administration trying to stop Israel from doing that thing? | ||
Why? | ||
With what bad deal? | ||
Iran keeps saying openly they will not stop enrichment. | ||
And yet, the United States is so desperate for a deal, what, for the sake of a deal? | ||
The Iranians know this, which is why they're pushing. | ||
Let's pause it again. | ||
Because if Israel attacks Iran, Iran is going to kill tens of thousands of American soldiers currently in the Middle East within striking range of hypersonic missiles that we can't stop from Iran. | ||
And it would pull us immediately into full war, 100% total war with Iran. | ||
And you know Ben knows that, right? | ||
Why is he acting dumb? | ||
All right. | ||
All right. | ||
Thanks, crew. | ||
Yeah, I forgot. | ||
Yeah, Ben Shapiro is a hostile foreign agent and should be sent back to Israel. | ||
Deport Ben Shapiro. | ||
That's my new try. | ||
Again, this is not hard to understand. | ||
Like, what is he... | ||
I'm confused because... | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Israel doesn't understand why Israel bombing Iran's nuclear sites or missile sites in the middle of negotiations, why that might interfere with America's negotiations. | ||
What America might be prioritizing is not necessarily what Israel wants us to prioritize. | ||
Why would we... | ||
Well, you just said it, Ben. | ||
We're not under threat of Iran. | ||
We can just cut this whole thing short and just say we should bomb Israel. | ||
If anybody's going to be bombed, if America's going to go to war with anybody, I think it should be against the genocidal state. | ||
I'm pushing war with Israel now. | ||
Let's go back to warmonger You know, propaganda, foreign agent Ben Shapiro, let's return. | ||
And so when Trump warned Netanyahu not to go and do anything about Iran, just trust us. | ||
Okay, listen, I will trust that President Trump will cut a good deal if he continues to maintain the Trump 1.0 stance, which is no nuclear enrichment at all, no nuclear facilities at all. | ||
That was something that three weeks ago the Trump administration was saying. | ||
President Trump himself, again, I'm with Trump 1.0 on this, not Steve Witkoff and J.D. Vance 2.0. | ||
Donald Trump 1.0 killed Qasem Soleimani, destroyed the Iranian economy, and held them in check. | ||
Then Joe Biden came in, reversed a bunch of that stuff, and he got October 7th in a vast regional war. | ||
Why wouldn't we just go back to Trump 1.0? | ||
That is the foreign policy that actually shaped the Abraham Accords. | ||
Why is that not the thing? | ||
Instead of calling the Prime Minister of Israel and telling him he needs to restrain himself on Iran. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I just want to let you know, it's an anti-Semitic trope to claim that people have dual loyalty. | ||
And it's not accurate. | ||
It's not right. | ||
Ben Shapiro has one singular loyalty, and it's to Israel. | ||
And that's got to be the disconnect here. | ||
Like, if Israel is your priority, and Benjamin Netanyahu is your sovereign and your king and your emperor, Then I can see why you'd be upset at what Trump's doing. | ||
If you even remotely are loyal to America and care about our interests and prioritize us and don't actually concern yourself with the desires of foreign hostile nations like Israel, who's been caught spying on America more than any other country, including putting stingray devices outside Trump's White House during his first administration. | ||
Then none of this is confusing or even questionable. | ||
We're going to get more into this, but I don't know, man. | ||
It's really getting to be too much at this point. | ||
And I don't know how anybody paying attention cannot see what's going on here. | ||
This isn't a small thing. | ||
This isn't just like a negotiation over trade in the Middle East. | ||
They're trying to start World War III. | ||
If it was up to them, they would have already bombed Iran. | ||
we'd already be in World War III. | ||
unidentified
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All right, welcome back, folks. | |
This is the American Journal. | ||
Second hour is on. | ||
unidentified
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We'll be joined by Ahmed Koussam and Prop & Co. | |
in just a second. | ||
unidentified
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Continue to talk about the state of Israel. | |
I got a couple of videos. | ||
That we can intro this with. | ||
Let's go to clip number five here. | ||
This is, again, our greatest ally. | ||
And again, it's just, this is why I like, I don't even have words for it. | ||
We just heard Marco Rubio, Secretary of State, say that, you know, we're taking these extraordinary measures. | ||
We're canceling visas. | ||
Because there are. | ||
New visa restrictions target foreign officials over social media censorship. | ||
And most of this is in service of Israel and targeted against the critics of Israel. | ||
Meanwhile, here's how Israel treats free speech. | ||
Clip number five. | ||
unidentified
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Israel just suppressed a documentary and then killed its creator. | |
Fatima Hussana was a photojournalist in Gaza. | ||
A documentary was just made about her, and it got accepted into the Cannes Film Festival two days ago. | ||
Once Israel found out, 24 hours later, she was murdered by the IDF, including 10 of her family members and her pregnant sister. | ||
They dropped a bomb on their house and killed them all. | ||
She had covered what was going on in Gaza for the past 18 months, and she wasn't afraid and even stated that she would be killed for the work that she was doing. | ||
It's a sad reality, but she has lost her life because of it. | ||
And again, so that's the country that we're protecting from criticism by claiming that we're standing up against foreign censorship. | ||
When dozens of journalists have been killed directly on purpose during the Gaza War, if you think it's a coincidence that this woman makes a documentary and 24 hours later her and 10 of her family members are killed, then you aren't listening to the Israelis because they brag about this. | ||
Let's go to clip number six here. | ||
This is a doctor testifying. | ||
In front of Congress about what he saw while he was working in Gaza. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
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In Gaza, I operated in hospitals without sterility, electricity, or anesthetics. | |
Surgeries took place on crowded and filthy floors. | ||
Children died not because their injuries were unsurvivable, but because we lacked blood, antibiotics, and the most basic supplies that are readily available in any large hospital anywhere else in the world. | ||
I did not see or treat a single combatant during my five weeks in Gaza. | ||
My patients were six-year-olds with shrapnels in their heart and bullets in their brains and pregnant women whose pelvises had been obliterated and their fetuses cut in two while still in the womb. | ||
Mothers sheltering in the hospital cooked bread on hot plates in the emergency department during mass casualty events as we dealt with the rain of fire and death falling around us everywhere. | ||
Well, good Lord. | ||
Well, Jesus Christ. | ||
Yeah, that's... | ||
I mean, but what about October 7th, though? | ||
Remember October 7th? | ||
So, who cares if pregnant women are being cut in half, right? | ||
Right? | ||
Completely insane. | ||
Let's go down to clip number four. | ||
Former head of Mossad, Mir Dagon. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
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So, Leslie, there has been a lot of speculation about whether Israel would go it alone, would attack Iran all on its own. | |
What does Mayor Dagan say about that? | ||
Well, he thinks it's a mistake generally to make it an Israeli-Iranian issue. | ||
It should be an international issue. | ||
Somehow the Saudis should be encouraged to speak up and pressure the United States. | ||
And what he really would like to happen is Israel sits back and the Americans... | ||
It would then be internationalized. | ||
He knows that Israel will be attacked, whoever does it, but they'll be attacked less. | ||
And what he's most worried about is the retaliation. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, no wonder. | ||
So it's the ex-head of Mossad being like, you know what would be great is if we start the fight and then America takes all the damage. | ||
I think that's the best. | ||
I think that's the best way to move forward. | ||
I bet you do. | ||
I bet you do, buddy. | ||
unidentified
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All right, welcome back. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the American Journal. | ||
Second hour is on. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
I'm very happy to welcome my guest, Ahmed Hussam. | ||
He's a filmmaker and the founder of Propaganda& Co., a media project focused on exposing and analyzing propaganda through cinematic investigative storytelling. | ||
You can follow their website at propandco.com. | ||
That's P-R-O-P-N-C-O.com. | ||
And on Twitter, at Prop& Co., P-R-O-P-A-N-D-C-O. | ||
And I encourage you to do so. | ||
Incredibly great content, very well produced. | ||
Ahmed, welcome to the show. | ||
Hey, thanks so much for having me, man. | ||
It's a pleasure to be here. | ||
Well, the pleasure is mine. | ||
And just to start off, just tell us what Prop& Co is, like how you started it, when you started it. | ||
It first came to my attention probably last year, just during the whole Gaza conflict. | ||
And you produced things incredibly well. | ||
Did you just start last year? | ||
You've been around for a while. | ||
Just tell us about the history of your media outlet. | ||
Yeah, I've been creating content for over a decade now. | ||
But during COVID, I created Propaganda& Co. | ||
Just wanted to take my skills of storytelling and content creation and contribute to the narratives that we are, you know, blasted with and propagated with. | ||
And so I didn't really have too much success until about the Russia-Ukraine war. | ||
And then after October 7th, my content blew up. | ||
I would produce these cinematic videos, I guess you could say, video explainers debunking propaganda, whether it was about the Russia-Ukraine war. | ||
Or Israel-Palestine. | ||
Obviously, we've all been following very closely what's been happening in Gaza since October 7th. | ||
And so a lot of my videos went viral after that. | ||
Essentially, what I do is just take articles, investigative journalism done by people like Max Blumenthal, Ali Abu Nima from Electronic Intifada. | ||
And I just try to amplify their work by creating content that I feel I can communicate their message in an interesting way. | ||
And so that's my claim to fame, I suppose. | ||
Well, it's really good how you do it because it doesn't matter how truthful something is. | ||
If it's not packaged nicely, people won't see it. | ||
They won't share it. | ||
They won't be able to understand it as well. | ||
It's just a fact. | ||
So, yeah, you really bring a lot of skills to the table. | ||
Now, one of the reasons I wanted to bring you on and talk to you is because you're very sort of skeptical about Trump's seeming sort of timidity when it comes to Israel. | ||
You know, we were just showing Ben Shapiro's reaction to the fact that I see some positive moves in that direction, and I sort of celebrate the fact that Trump is not decoupling from Israel, but doesn't seem to be doing everything exactly like they want. | ||
But you have some interesting perspective on this that maybe this is, well, what is your view on this? | ||
Do you think Trump is really sort of breaking with the mold and going against Israel in some ways? | ||
Or is this all a big game? | ||
What's your perspective on the current relationship between America and Israel? | ||
Yeah, I think it's a game. | ||
I think on the surface, obviously, there are words that sound very... | ||
I think it's a good thing that they're at least attempting to put on this performance because I think it's a reflection of the fact that The majority of the American people are sick and tired of the relationship with Israel, especially on the right, as we've seen since October 7th. | ||
It's been brewing for a very long time, but what October 7th did was set fire to this field in which there were a lot of people that were really just tired of this relationship. | ||
And so that's a good thing, that they at least feel the need to put on this performance. | ||
But if you look past the words, if you look beneath the surface, you'll find actions, and actions speak much louder than words, as we all know. | ||
And as we've seen, Donald Trump has given Israel everything they want. | ||
He continued to sell them weapons. | ||
As we know, Biden obviously supported the genocide. | ||
The genocide is more his than Trump's just because of the fact that the majority of it took place during his tenure. | ||
But Biden at least paused the sale of 2,000-pound bombs. | ||
Trump immediately removed that and continued to sell them weapons. | ||
And of course, as we know, the ceasefire which him and Wyckoff negotiated, the temporary ceasefire, was broken by Israel in March. | ||
It only lasted for a month. | ||
And Trump and Wyckoff have allowed Israel to starve the population nearly 80 days without any aid. | ||
There are pockets of famine and starvation in Gaza. | ||
And they've allowed thousands and thousands of more civilians to be killed since the breaking of that ceasefire. | ||
So, yeah, I think it's a theatrical performance. | ||
You can tell that by the actions. | ||
And if you just look at who Stephen Wyckoff is, Stephen Wyckoff is a proud American Zionist Jew. | ||
He is a longtime supporter and friend of Miriam Adelson, Benjamin Netanyahu. | ||
And I put out a thread today. | ||
If you look on my Twitter account, I'll retweet it so that it comes to the top so that people can find it more easily. | ||
But I talk about Wyckoff's actions and his support. | ||
A lot of people don't know this, but Wyckoff also received a pager from Israel, from senior Mossad officials, and he was very proud to share that pager with journalists from the Atlantic who had interviewed him. | ||
And on the back of the pager, it says, to Stephen, a friend of Israel. | ||
And it has the initials OTJ, which is one tough Jew. | ||
And so yeah, I think Stephen Wyckoff, through his actions and through his experiences, You know, Israel first. | ||
He's a Zionist first. | ||
And Trump, as we know, received hundreds of millions of dollars from not just Miriam Adelson, but Wyckoff as well. | ||
When Biden paused the shipment of those 2,000-pound bombs, Wyckoff took advantage of that moment, and he reached out, and he says this himself in the article, that he personally reached out to his Zionist Jewish network, and he received tens of millions of dollars for Donald Trump, obviously helping the Trump campaign, but doing it Basically in the context of, hey, Biden paused the shipment of these bombs. | ||
Biden is trying to undermine Israel's attempt to complete the ethnic cleansing and genocide of Gaza. | ||
But we're not going to do that when we get elected. | ||
And obviously he delivered on that promise. | ||
Yeah, I guess I see a little bit of like the inverted, sort of an inverted view than you because I, I'm, you know, Netanyahu and me, our relationship is amazing. | ||
But then I see the actions that he does don't quite align with that. | ||
I mean, Netanyahu visited Washington, D.C. three different times. | ||
We know that, you know, Mike Waltz was communicating with Netanyahu and got fired over that. | ||
Or, well, he got moved over to UN ambassador because these guys never get fired or, you know, called out for even treasonous activity like that. | ||
But, I mean, you don't think that Trump would have started war with Iran by this point if he was working for Israel? | ||
I mean, clearly that's what Israel wants. | ||
Why is he not doing that if that's the play? | ||
Well, first of all, let me just say that I'm open to the possibility that I'm wrong. | ||
And I hope I'm wrong. | ||
I hope that you're right and I'm wrong. | ||
However, I'll say... | ||
And if you pay attention to the negotiations, you'll find a very confused American position. | ||
And that might be the entire point. | ||
Negotiations have been used historically, whether it's with Iran or with Gaza in the last year, as we've seen. | ||
They use negotiations to kind of delay a potential response from actors in the region to try and stop the genocide. | ||
Because it leads people to believe that, okay, it can stop through diplomacy, it can stop through negotiations. | ||
But as we've seen through actions, the policies that essentially produce war, produce violence, they have continued. | ||
Now, when it comes to the negotiations with Iran, Stephen Wyckoff initially spoke positively of his counterparts, and they were talking about potentially bringing this to a peaceful conclusion. | ||
But then they started giving Iran conditions that they can't really agree to. | ||
First, they said, we don't want you to have a nuclear weapon. | ||
Iran said, yeah, sure, no problem. | ||
We don't want a nuclear weapon. | ||
Then they said, okay, well, you can't have ballistic missiles. | ||
Well, the problem is that the ballistic missiles is really their only form of defense because they don't have an advanced inventory of fighter jets. | ||
So they can't really defend themselves from the state of Israel without these ballistic missiles. | ||
They need that deterrent factor. | ||
Well, they wanted them to dismantle it. | ||
Then they said, okay, maybe we'll consider the fact that you don't need to dismantle it, but you have to give up enrichment, complete enrichment. | ||
So, as you know, to enrich uranium for a nuclear weapon, you need to bring it up to like 97% or something of that nature. | ||
I could be wrong about the specifics. | ||
Iran is currently at like 60%. | ||
They're saying we're happy to go back to the enrichment levels that Obama gave us during the JCPOA, which was 3%, which is... | ||
And they're saying that you guys can observe this. | ||
We'll allow international observers into the country where they can keep an eye on us and make sure that our centrifuges are only producing uranium enrichment to 3%, which we'll use for pharmaceuticals. | ||
We'll use it for low radioactive pesticides, which apparently, I didn't know this, but apparently it's safer than other types of chemical pesticides. | ||
So Iran has invested for many decades. | ||
They're engineers. | ||
They're scientists. | ||
To develop their own centrifuges and to develop this nuclear program, which, by the way, having a nuclear program and having enrichment allows them to produce cheaper energy so that they don't have to tap into their oil and gas reserves so they can sell that and make more money for the economy. | ||
So it's in Iran's interest to have some level of enrichment. | ||
The U.S. is saying you can't have any and you need to blow up your facilities that they've spent decades working on. | ||
From Iran's perspective, they're giving them conditions that they can't agree to, which means these negotiations are essentially dragging on and giving Trump the ability to say, hey, look, we tried. | ||
And if we don't get everything we want, then, you know, potentially we could go to war with you. | ||
And so I'm not convinced that this is going to end positively. | ||
I have a very pessimistic negative view. | ||
I hope I'm wrong. | ||
But I'd rather not be surprised and have expectations that we fall short of and then we end up incredibly disappointed. | ||
So I'm paying attention to the rhetoric. | ||
And, you know, look, as much as Trump and Wyckoff try to speak positively about the negotiations, behind them are war hawks like Marco Rubio. | ||
Behind them are, you know, we saw the Republicans came out with a statement like, no, we demand complete dismantlement of their entire nuclear program. | ||
And so even if there's an agreement with Wyckoff and Trump, Who's to say that Congress is going to allow it or won't undermine it? | ||
So from Iran's perspective, this isn't looking good. | ||
And I think the fact that I'm sorry to rant on here. | ||
But Witkoff recently secured the release of the Israeli IDF soldier, Edan Alexander. | ||
And the idea was that Hamas had a gentleman's agreement with Witkoff. | ||
So this wasn't on paper, but Witkoff told them if you release... | ||
We will secure aid. | ||
We will end the blockade so that we can end the famine and we'll allow aid into Gaza. | ||
After they released Iran Alexander, that didn't happen. | ||
It was several weeks before we ended up seeing this like really silly, catastrophic aid where they're putting Palestinians in a cage, essentially, and then even shooting and killing them in some cases to receive aid from the Gaza Humanitarian Fund, which we now know is a front for an Israeli operation to provide aid to Gaza in a controlled manner. | ||
What they're trying to do is move the population to the south and from there eventually dump them into Egypt. | ||
So, yeah, I'm just not convinced by any of the rhetoric that they want to avoid war with Iran or that there's a split with Israel. | ||
Yeah, and it is just all... | ||
It's clearly just layers and layers of deception. | ||
And it's really just hard to get to what the actual truth is. | ||
And again, it's like, you know, Trump will... | ||
He said some bad stuff about, or he's even shared videos, you know, calling Netanyahu, you know, a warmongering bastard. | ||
And, you know, he shares that and says, you know, exactly right. | ||
So it's like, okay, is that the real thing? | ||
Is the glad handing in front of the cameras the real thing? | ||
It's just impossible to untangle it all. | ||
So I completely agree. | ||
Like, I'm totally on your side that I'm also willing to have my mind changed, and I also hope that I'm right. | ||
Because I'm trying to have an optimistic view. | ||
I see Trump seemingly doing positive things, not going to war with Iran. | ||
Heck, during his first administration, he was presented a war plan to go to war with Iran, and he refused it. | ||
And he, you know, denounced it, and he was caught on, like, secret recording. | ||
I tend to put more weight on that because he didn't know he was being recorded at the time. | ||
And he says, you know, look at this. | ||
Look at this plan. | ||
They wanted me to bomb Iran. | ||
And I said, no, can you believe that? | ||
And that was and that was during his first administration. | ||
So that's why I was sort of confident in saying, no, Trump is not going to go to war with Iran. | ||
They literally tried it his first administration and he prevented it from happening. | ||
I don't see any reason why that wouldn't happen again. | ||
But then, as you point out, you know, there are so many different you almost have to ask, like, OK, who are they saying what for? | ||
One thing, I don't remember if it was you or somebody else, but somebody on X was saying, no, this is a game to lure Iran into a false sense of security. | ||
It's not even really about, like, tricking the American public. | ||
It's about making Iran think that nothing's going to happen to lower their guard so that when the sneak attack comes, it's more impactful. | ||
What do you think about that idea? | ||
That put in a new perspective to me. | ||
It's like, okay, this isn't about tricking the American populace. | ||
It's about putting on a play. | ||
For Iran so that when the attack comes, it's more surprising. | ||
What's your view on that? | ||
Yeah, I share that view. | ||
I know many others do as well. | ||
It's difficult to speculate because we don't really know what's inside Trump's mind or of the people who are behind this. | ||
We know that the Ayatollah of Iran, he tweeted out and he made statements in a public speech in which he calls on the country to keep their guard up high, that he's not fooled by the negotiations. | ||
And he's allowing them to take place because they have to show good faith and they have to try to avoid a conflict. | ||
But he doesn't have any faith in it. | ||
And for good reason. | ||
I mean, they had a deal with Obama and it got torn up less than a year later or less than two years later, whatever the case was. | ||
So they have good reason to be skeptical. | ||
And I think we all do as well. | ||
I mean, there's an... | ||
We have his entire first term to look at, and then now we have the first five months of his administration, and we can see that he has very little control, to be frank with you. | ||
The Zionists are very powerful and they've hijacked every administration in a way. | ||
Netanyahu is more powerful than Donald Trump because Netanyahu not only has support from all of the Republican Party, but all of the Democratic Party where we know Trump doesn't have that kind of power. | ||
He has control and influence over the Republicans, but not the Democrats where Netanyahu has bipartisan support because of the fact that they blackmail and bribe every single politician that gets into office. | ||
And so, um, Yeah, I'm just skeptical of that. | ||
You know, I just came back from... | ||
I was there for a week. | ||
I got invited to a media festival there. | ||
And I spoke to people and I got a sense of what the country was like. | ||
There's a major cultural divide in Iran. | ||
There are people who are dedicated and committed to the revolution and to the Islamic Republic government. | ||
And then you have a massive segment of the population that grew up on Instagram. | ||
And even though it's banned in the country, they all use VPNs and there's nothing the government can do about it. | ||
And I saw gothic kids at the market. | ||
I saw people who are obsessed with anime. | ||
Western culture is pervasive. | ||
And these people, there's a massive divide. | ||
And a lot of them are actually anti-government. | ||
And so what Trump, what Netanyahu, what the deep state, what they're betting on is that they can turn up the heat, not only on the sanctions, which over the last 10 years, Iran's GDP has been slashed in half because of these sanctions. | ||
They're already economically in a difficult spot, even though I saw a country that had everything it needed. | ||
The infrastructure was nice. | ||
I didn't see any potholes. | ||
Still, life is tough for these people living under sanctions. | ||
And now they've turned up the heat where the Treasury Secretary, Scott Besant, I think is his name, he said that they're going to try and cut off 90% of Iran's exports. | ||
So now they're offering secondary and third. | ||
Sanctions on this network because that's how they subvert the sanctions, right? | ||
They create new businesses, new names, and they sell it to this person who then goes out and sells it. | ||
So they're putting sanctions on that chain of that network, and they're trying to really cripple Iran's income and revenue. | ||
And they're going to use covert means to put pressure and try to flip the government. | ||
And a couple of years ago, they saw protests that really destabilized Iran. | ||
Just seven months ago, nobody thought Bashar al-Assad in Syria was going to fall. | ||
All of a sudden, in a blitzkrieg offensive, in like nine days, he collapses. | ||
So they have reason to think positively of their plan, to couple covert means with sanctions, and then potentially even an attack. | ||
The Trump administration, you mentioned this war plan that was presented to him. | ||
He was given a list of options. | ||
One of those options include using a bunker buster with a nuclear warhead. | ||
To potentially collapse the nuclear facilities that are burrowed deeply underground. | ||
There's debate over whether or not that could work. | ||
I think it could actually. | ||
This tactical nuclear weapon. | ||
But Trump had this war plan and he approved a wide range of options. | ||
One of those, it included basically this war with Yemen, which we've already seen. | ||
It included sanctions and it included covert operations. | ||
We've seen all that already. | ||
So the war plan is actually being acted out and implemented. | ||
And so the idea, when people imagine war with Iran, they think like American troops are going to invade Iran like they did Iraq. | ||
That's not going to happen. | ||
They're imagining war in a different way, to their credit, actually. | ||
They just think that if they can turn up the heat through sanctions, through covert means, through social media propaganda, and then a bombing campaign. | ||
They think that they can actually flip the government. | ||
Will that actually work? | ||
I don't know. | ||
But in my mind, they're clearly acting on that plan. | ||
And I think within a couple of weeks, maybe even months, we could see them actually, you know, bomb Iran, whether it comes from Israel or the United States or both of them acting together. | ||
Yeah, it just seems like it, like almost like a stalemate because, you know, So that would be what little GDP they do have. | ||
You'd be cutting off a big chunk of that. | ||
But it's like Israel's not that big. | ||
It has most of its critical infrastructure in a pretty small place. | ||
They can't stop these hypersonic missiles. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
I mean, they wouldn't be able to pull off an attack big enough to disable a response from Iran that would be catastrophic for all of Israel. | ||
We have all these bases around Iran that they could hit with hypersonic missiles that we have no way of stopping. | ||
So it's like the instant somebody makes that first move, if Israel were to attack, it would just be catastrophic across the board. | ||
There's almost a sense of mutually assured destruction that I don't really know. | ||
It's like that's not even a part of the negotiations, even though everybody knows that's real. | ||
So it's like, what even can happen next? | ||
What can happen next that doesn't result in Like, is there anything that can even happen? | ||
And I guess it makes sense what you're saying, that they're trying to culturally sort of subvert the rulers of Iran and start a civil war there like they did in Syria. | ||
I'm sure there are people who did it in Syria that are moving across the border into Iran to try to foster it there. | ||
But what even can happen when you have these two very powerful states right next to each other armed to the teeth? | ||
Isn't it mutually assured destruction? | ||
I mean, how does that factor into all this? | ||
That's an excellent point. | ||
You're absolutely right. | ||
Iran has a very powerful ballistic missile arsenal. | ||
They sell weapons to the Russians and to the Chinese. | ||
You know, their drone technology has surprised a lot of people. | ||
And they've demonstrated through their True Promise 1 and True Promise 2 attack that they can actually enter Israeli airspace despite the presence of very sophisticated and advanced weapons defense systems. | ||
And with the support of the United States and neighboring countries like Jordan, they were still able to infiltrate Israeli airspace and hit targets. | ||
The problem is that we don't actually know how many ballistic missiles Iran has. | ||
They could say, hey, look how fancy our hypersonic missile is. | ||
But do they have tens of thousands of them? | ||
We don't know. | ||
If they do, then yeah, Israel's in trouble. | ||
But if they don't, then they might have a couple powerful attacks in their arsenal. | ||
And then beyond that, they don't. | ||
What the Americans have seen, not just in the last two years, where Israel has been poking and prodding Iran. | ||
We know they assassinated Ismail Haniyeh, the political head of Hamas, while he was in Tehran. | ||
We know that they assassinated basically all of Hezbollah's leadership in Lebanon. | ||
They bombed the Iranian embassy in Syria. | ||
They've been engaging in covert attacks. | ||
And despite these provocations, Iran hasn't really responded in a way to establish deterrence. | ||
Even though they attacked Israel twice, they didn't produce any casualties, and they didn't really destroy any significant military infrastructure. | ||
They did hit the Nebatim airbase. | ||
Can you hang on with us to the next segment? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Okay, we're going to be back with Ahmad Hussam. | ||
He runs Prop& Co. | ||
Follow them on Twitter, propandco. | ||
Propinco.com is the website. | ||
We'll be back on the other side to lay out the timeline of sort of how we got here. | ||
Welcome back, folks. | ||
This is Harrison Smith coming to you live from the Infowars studios here this Thursday morning. | ||
I'm joined by Ahmed Hussam. | ||
He's a filmmaker and founder of Propaganda& Co. | ||
Prop& Co. | ||
On Twitter, the website propinco.com. | ||
And again, I wanted to bring Ahmed on because he's a little more skeptical, a little more suspicious of some of Trump's moves where I'm trying to resist being optimistic because... | ||
I've been fooled before, and when I see Trump doing things like saying, yeah, I told Netanyahu to hold off until we're done with negotiations, and I'm like, yes, asserting American independence, but of course he's not going to do to Netanyahu what he did to the South African president or Zelensky, where he goes, oh, you're not committing a genocide? | ||
Well, let me bring up some videos. | ||
He's not going to do anything like that, which is disappointing, but I never expected that. | ||
But you were going through in the last segment. | ||
We've got to save face. | ||
We've got to launch these missiles. | ||
We don't want to hurt anybody, so where can we launch them and how can we make this look? | ||
So there's a lot of, like, kabuki theater going on. | ||
It seems to me like Israel has taken a giant gamble. | ||
To take out Hezbollah, to take out Hamas, and I know people say they aren't taken out, but their leadership has been decimated. | ||
They're much, much weaker than they ever were before. | ||
Syria has gone down. | ||
It seems like they have a brief window of opportunity right now that they're desperate to attack Iran, by which I mean get America to attack Iran, right? | ||
Because whether it's Israel that launches the attack or America, it's American soldiers stationed in the Middle East and our aircraft carriers that are going to pay the price. | ||
If conflict were to break out in a real way. | ||
So, I mean, do you think that's how the Israelis are operating? | ||
What do you think the mindset is? | ||
Why hasn't Iran, why didn't Iran go harder over the last year and a half? | ||
I'm not even advocating that they should have, but just strategically or tactically, I don't understand why they didn't take more aggressive movement when all of their proxy networks were being dismantled. | ||
I mean, just what do you think the timeline is right now? | ||
Where are we? | ||
How did we get here? | ||
Just pick it up where you left off, sir. | ||
So you're absolutely right to frame it in this way. | ||
Israel has been seizing this opportunity. | ||
And as disgusting as they have been and as horrible as they are, and as much as I'd like to see them be defeated, Netanyahu is actually doing exactly what he should do because he is squeezing this opportunity of October 7th for as much as he can get, even if it means destroying the reputation of Israel, which it has done. | ||
What they really care about is hard power on the ground. | ||
Who is going to come stop us? | ||
You guys can tweet and talk about whatever you want. | ||
All the articles can come out. | ||
If you're not going to come stop us, we don't care. | ||
And they have more than 250 nuclear weapons. | ||
At least that's what the reports say. | ||
And so they have a nuclear monopoly in the Middle East. | ||
And what they're trying to do is take advantage of this opportunity and have the war go from Gaza to Lebanon to Syria and eventually Iran, because Iran is really the only actor in the region that could potentially threaten their hegemony by the existence of their nuclear program. | ||
Because what Iran... | ||
And right now, that's true. | ||
But the point, you know, for them to have a nuclear program in which they have all the pieces in place in 20, 30 years, they could decide, let's build a nuclear weapon. | ||
And then that would basically even the playing ground with them in Israel. | ||
And what that would do is trigger a nuclear arms race in the Middle East because Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Egypt, these other countries are not going to sit there and watch Iran get a nuclear weapon. | ||
They're going to get one, too. | ||
And now all of a sudden, everyone in the region is militarily on par with each other. | ||
And now Israel has to really be concerned about the fact that, hey, you know, we can't treat the Palestinians like human animals because they're not. | ||
And so they are desperate to destroy Iran's nuclear program, whether it's through negotiations, sanctions, covert means, or potentially through war. | ||
They can't do it alone. | ||
They've been lying and telling everyone, we destroyed Iran's air defenses. | ||
Well, if that were true, they'd be bombing Iran right now. | ||
Just like they bomb Syria and Lebanon and Gaza with impunity. | ||
They're not doing that. | ||
That means Iran's air defenses are still intact. | ||
So they need the U.S. to come in and do the heavy lifting. | ||
Because the U.S., even if Iran could threaten the U.S.'s bases all over the region, the U.S. is such a big, powerful beast, a machine. | ||
it can withstand that in a way where Israel cannot. | ||
And what's happening is that every... | ||
And the reason why is because they've been strangled by these sanctions for the last 10 years. | ||
They made a peace deal with Saudi Arabia prior to October 7th, which no one was expecting. | ||
It was a five-year truce negotiated by China that became a 10-year truce. | ||
And the reason why that happened is because Iran wanted to de-escalate. | ||
They're like, we need to focus on the domestic issues in our country. | ||
And so now is not the time for war. | ||
All of a sudden, Hamas attacks on October 7th, and they get sucked into it, and so does the entire axis of resistance. | ||
So it came at the worst time for them. | ||
And Trump, in his first administration, he assassinated Qasem Soleimani. | ||
Which was Iran's top general. | ||
How did Iran respond? | ||
They bombed a base in Iraq that belonged to the Americans. | ||
But they gave the Americans a heads up. | ||
They said, we're going to bomb this base at this time. | ||
They moved their equipment. | ||
They moved their soldiers. | ||
And so Iran got to demonstrate deterrence in a response to the world and to the public. | ||
And it was impressive, right? | ||
But it didn't actually affect the U.S. in any way. | ||
And so they got to avoid escalation. | ||
That was the first sign that, hey, you can kill a top general. | ||
You can violate a country's interests and disrespect them and attack them, and they're going to respond in this kind of weak way. | ||
I do believe Iran has strength, but I think their actions clearly demonstrate, at least to the Americans and the Israelis, that these guys don't really want the fight. | ||
They don't want that smoke. | ||
So the same thing happened over the last two years. | ||
They attacked Israel twice. | ||
It was very impressive. | ||
But it didn't do enough to establish deterrence. | ||
So Israel and the U.S. are convinced Iran doesn't want this. | ||
So this is the time. | ||
They see blood in the water. | ||
We've got to turn up the pressure. | ||
And so that's what I think is happening right now. | ||
What do you think about the, I think you're exactly right. | ||
there's a lot of Kabuki theater going on. | ||
And even though it's sort of done in the open, There's a tit for tat. | ||
There's sort of a rules of engagement that you attack, now I have to attack. | ||
And, you know, as long as my attack isn't bigger than yours and it won't escalate. | ||
I mean, it's like a, I don't even want to call it a game because obviously it's people dying, but there's the rule sets. | ||
It's almost like a game that they're playing with each other. | ||
And it's, again, hard to get to the intentions at the heart of it. | ||
I've seen people suggest that, And that's their primary concern, and basically to achieve that, they're creating all this drama and conflict with Iran, knowing that it's not really going to come to anything. | ||
Do you give any credence to that theory? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'll just say that these are all just my opinions based on the information that I see and how I process it. | ||
I am open to the possibility that I could be wrong. | ||
I'll just say that. | ||
But I think for Israel, the way they view it, it's a win-win situation for them. | ||
Either this ends with ethnic cleansing and genocide in Gaza and they get to... | ||
What Israel's main concern was with Hamas is... | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
They've been stealing more and more land. | ||
They've completely violated the Oslo Accords from 1993, 1994, where they agreed to establish a Palestinian state. | ||
They created the Palestinian Authority. | ||
You guys prove you can govern yourselves, prove you don't want to destroy us Jews, and then we'll give you a state. | ||
Well, after seven years, they didn't deliver anything. | ||
And now it's been 30 years, and we've only seen the occupation expand. | ||
And then with the Abraham Accords, Trump basically circumvented the Palestinians. | ||
He stopped pretending that they were a party worth negotiating with. | ||
They're completely powerless. | ||
He went to the UAE, to Bahrain, to Morocco, and he said, hey, join the Abraham Accords, normalize with Israel. | ||
And when they did that, that made Hamas say, we have no other option. | ||
People only pay attention to us when people are fighting and dying. | ||
So you guys won't pay attention to us during the violent peace, really, which is what it was. | ||
Before October 7th, Palestinians were still getting killed daily almost. | ||
And so they decided to just escalate and bring this issue back to the world's attention, which they did very successfully. | ||
Unfortunately, it produced the situation that we're in. | ||
But for Israel, they don't want to ever experience blowback again because they thought that they had completely brought Palestinian resistance to submission. | ||
That was crazy. | ||
So now they want to completely destroy any form of resistance, whether it's in Lebanon, but especially in Palestine, so that they can never experience blowback again. | ||
They want to just continue their apartheid, ethnic cleansing, Jewish supremacy, genocide with impunity. | ||
They don't want to ever experience blowback. | ||
So for them, if this ends the way it looks like it's going to end with ethnic cleansing and genocide, then they win. | ||
If they can go beyond that and also destroy it on or flip the government, that's an even bigger win. | ||
So they're going – Yeah, and you talk about the hard power, and I agree with that, that you can talk all you want. | ||
If no one's going to stop them, they're just going to do it, especially when they have the really consistent and unwavering support of the American political class. | ||
I mean, that is a shield to them against the U.N., against the ICJ. | ||
I mean, America is their attack dog, and they're very comfortable sort of doing whatever they want as long as America... | ||
But then you've got things like Germany. | ||
You know, the German president came out for the first time going, all right, now it's getting too far. | ||
I mean, there's definitely a popular shift against Israel. | ||
Obviously, this is, you know, a big topic of conversation when it comes to anti-Semitism and the student protests. | ||
But it's like, if the student protests didn't matter, then they wouldn't dedicate so much time and resources to shutting it down. | ||
You know, the way that they've acted over the last year and a half and the videos that young people are growing up having burned into their minds, some of the gruesome images that we've seen on a daily basis since October 7th. | ||
I mean, that's a real risk for them. | ||
If they don't have support of America, they're in big trouble. | ||
And if they don't have endless support of America, So, I mean, is it existential threat further down the line if they don't get the endless support of America? | ||
I mean, how do you think they take that into account? | ||
And what do you think the effectiveness of the student protest is or how things are going in that regard? | ||
again obviously they're going to do what they can get away with they're going to do But there is this tidal shift going on. | ||
It's slower. | ||
It's not as intense. | ||
But clearly, the people of the world are not happy with what Israel's doing. | ||
And that could be a real big problem for them. | ||
I mean, do you think they don't have to worry about that? | ||
Because the political structures are so firmly in their control due to the blackmail, due to all the other stuff that you've mentioned. | ||
Or do you think that, you know, five years from now, when the boomers aren't around to quite the degree they are and all the young people are anti-Israel, I mean, they could get cut off. | ||
And that would be, you know, curtains for their military, you know, adventurism, right? | ||
You're correct in pointing out that they are very worried about this shift. | ||
And definitely this is going to produce consequences and repercussions, but it's going to take time. | ||
slow moving as you said in my view the greatest victory of october 7th was uh Because growing up, I've been doing Palestine activism for like 13 years now. | ||
Growing up, only people who really paid attention to Palestine and cared about it that I would engage with were people on the left, liberals, Democrats. | ||
We had more success engaging in dialogue with them, not so much on the right. | ||
But that has changed drastically. | ||
And that was brewing prior to October 7th, like the Groyper movement, Nick Fuentes and others. | ||
Anyone who found themselves just criticizing Israel would get the severe blowback. | ||
And that just kind of entrenched people in this position that, hey, Israel has too much influence and they're violating our rights to speak about that. | ||
And then October 7th basically just poured fuel onto this fire. | ||
And now we're seeing the majority of the country, according to Pew Research, is against Israel. | ||
Number of conservative youth, Republican youth, are increasingly anti-Israel. | ||
And I spoke to some of these people myself. | ||
I went to AFPAC last year. | ||
I went to the America First conference. | ||
And I went to Turning Point USA's conference. | ||
And I interviewed with Sneeko and Suleiman Ahmed. | ||
I was there filming. | ||
And we spoke to some young Republicans. | ||
Yeah, I mean, they sounded like me. | ||
I was like, oh, wow, okay, there's this major shift happening. | ||
So Israel is obviously very, very worried about that. | ||
For that reason, I think Israel is desperate to get everything they can out of this situation because they know the clock is ticking. | ||
How long is that going to take? | ||
10, 20 years for this to produce consequences that are enough to end U.S. support or endless support? | ||
I think the U.S. will always, to some extent, potentially support Israel. | ||
But this blank check, endless support, do whatever you want, that's going to come to an end. | ||
We're at the peak of Israeli power, and it's only going to decline from here, I think, politically, at least in the United States. | ||
So I think they're desperate to try and get as much as they can out of this situation. | ||
Now, to answer your final question about the student protests, yeah, I think that is very, very important. | ||
I mean, when I was a student in college, I believed very strongly in the idea that the Battle place of ideas in the country starts at the universities first. | ||
And so I waged an information war on my campus and the student protesters did an excellent job, you know, continuing that fight at a very important time. | ||
Essentially, what are the students asking for really? | ||
Hey, we pay tuition to the university and that tuition, a portion of it is invested in these companies that are blowing up children in Gaza. | ||
And a lot of these students are Palestinian. | ||
Can you imagine being a Palestinian American and you pay tuition to your university? | ||
And when you're like, hey, do you mind not investing my tuition and blowing up my cousins, my family members, my mother, my brother, my sister, my uncle? | ||
You're deported. | ||
What is it? | ||
I said you're deported. | ||
How dare you suggest we not pay for this stuff? | ||
I completely agree with you. | ||
Right, exactly. | ||
Yeah, you get deported for writing an op-ed. | ||
Yeah, it's crazy. | ||
So yeah, the student protests have been incredibly successful, and I think they're very important, and they need to escalate, in my opinion. | ||
The encampments need to continue. | ||
They need to force the conversation longer. | ||
Yeah, I mean, it's their right. | ||
And again, it's like, you know, people say, well, you know, it's sort of a, you have to pick one side or the other. | ||
If you're against Israel, it's because you love Hamas and think, you know, you want to be taken over by Muslims. | ||
So it's like, no, I'm an American. | ||
Americans have free speech. | ||
No foreign country gets to impose their restrictions on our campus. | ||
It's outrageous that that's happening. | ||
It's outrageous. | ||
They're studying people's social media to make sure they're sufficiently pro-Israel to be allowed into America. | ||
I mean, all of this is... | ||
So there is a strange bipartisanship agreement on this. | ||
But then, of course, you know, I disagree with like some of the reasons the left opposes Israel to them. | ||
It seems to me like they perceive it as just another like racial aspect where it's like the white Israelis are hurting the poor brown Palestinians. | ||
And that's the entirety of their understanding. | ||
But hey, you know, war makes strange bedfellows. | ||
I want to ask you. | ||
About two more things, because we're sort of running low on time, and I wish we could continue this conversation longer. | ||
We'll have to do another conversation. | ||
But on May 1st, Trump threatened to cut off trade with any country buying Iranian oil. | ||
25 days later, China opened a new rail line connecting Shanghai and Tehran to speed up the transport of oil from Iran to China and goods from China to Iran. | ||
Not a single major news outlet on the West is reporting this. | ||
And this rail. | ||
I mean, clearly China has not been put off by these threats about sanctioning Iran. | ||
So again, to me, it's like, why even make the threat if you can't uphold it? | ||
Why say you're going to punish any country that does this deal and then let China get away with doing the deal? | ||
It seems to me like, again, by making these statements, Trump is just putting himself in a position of weakness. | ||
What's your comment on this bizarre development? | ||
Yeah, that's an excellent point. | ||
Trump is, as we've seen with the tariff issue in general, he makes these big threats that corner him into a position where he's destined to lose. | ||
I don't know too much about the tariff issue, because I like the idea that Trump is trying to bring American manufacturing back to America. | ||
I think that's the right thing to do. | ||
He wants to protect the American worker. | ||
I just think it's too little too late. | ||
You know, punishing China for doing what the Americans invested in. | ||
American corporations went to China to take advantage of the low wages and the lax rules on environmental issues and things of that nature. | ||
And so they wanted to increase profit. | ||
So they sacrificed the American worker and they went to go set up shop in China. | ||
And so they produced this issue. | ||
Now they want to try and punish China and other countries. | ||
But the problem is they don't have as much leverage as they think. | ||
And now he's done. | ||
To Iran, not what he did, but what Biden did to Russia, which has pushed them closer to China. | ||
Now China, because China's biggest weakness is that they need energy to power this massive economy that they have and this manufacturing. | ||
And you need cheap energy in order to maximize your profits and your efficiency and your production. | ||
So now they're getting this from Russia. | ||
They're getting this from Iran. | ||
Iran and Russia aren't in love with this because to them, they would love to diversify. | ||
They're exports. | ||
You don't want to be dependent on one person importing your oil and energy. | ||
That gives them too much leverage over you. | ||
So you don't want to diversify this, and Russia does as well. | ||
But the U.S. has basically put them in a position where their biggest buyer are going to be China and India. | ||
And as much as you try to punish them, they're not going to undermine their own interests. | ||
Why wouldn't you buy oil on the cheap from a country that desperately needs to sell it? | ||
So that was a major mistake, I think. | ||
Well, I even have trouble thinking it's a mistake. | ||
I did a tweet about this yesterday, especially when it comes to Russia. | ||
It's like, clearly China is our geopolitical rival, and yet we're doing everything we possibly can to drive Russia into their arms, to drive Iran into their arms. | ||
It's like this is beyond incompetence. | ||
I have trouble thinking that people running the world are that stupid. | ||
And it seems like they're more likely doing it on purpose because they – As a final question before you have to go, and just as a hypothetical, I mean, what would you do if you were Trump? | ||
If you woke up next morning, Freaky Friday style, and you were suddenly in the body of Trump, like, what would you do when you woke up in the morning? | ||
I'd invite Benjamin Netanyahu to the Red Wedding at the White House. | ||
We'd play the Reigns of Castamere. | ||
All the survivors of the USS Liberty would come out and they'd be playing the reins of Kastamir. | ||
And Netanyahu would be... | ||
That would be the end of that. | ||
Then there'd really be a rift, for sure. | ||
Freaky Friday, the red wedding at the, at the white house. | ||
Yeah, that, that would, uh, I think that'd create more problems than, uh, than otherwise. | ||
So maybe, yeah, maybe in all seriousness, um, I would probably look at the Gulf countries and say, hey, you guys are a lot more useful to us than Israel. | ||
You guys actually have a lot of money and you invest in our economy and you also collaborate with us in terms of security. | ||
I've argued... | ||
But if Israel was naturally, truly naturally in America's interest, the lobby wouldn't have to spend like $100 million a year bribing politicians to convince them that Israel is America's greatest ally. | ||
If that were the case, you wouldn't have to spend a single penny. | ||
It would just be obvious, right? | ||
But that's not the case. | ||
And I think there are other more valuable partners in the region that could serve America's interest in the region. | ||
The Gulf countries have demonstrated that. | ||
Turkey has demonstrated that. | ||
Iran is saying, hey, we'd love to do business with the West. | ||
And so Israel isn't really needed. | ||
And Israel is this speed bump on the way towards economic prosperity for the Middle East, which the U.S. kind of needs. | ||
Because if their corporations can do business in the Middle East, there can be a sort of revitalization of the American economy and give it more of a runway as they try to compete with China. | ||
And that might still happen because, as we've seen from his last trip, the Gulf countries, despite the genocide, unfortunately, they're not using the leverage they have to try and bring Israel's genocide to an end. | ||
But the leaders of the region, I think, and the people of the region definitely don't really like Israel. | ||
It's just the leaders are... | ||
And that's what Israel does very, very well. | ||
They gain leverage over you, whether it's through hard power or through blackmail and bribery and sex trafficking and things of that nature. | ||
So, yeah, in short, if I were Trump, I'd recalibrate the relationship for sure. | ||
That's why I'd recalibrate, recalibrate all over the place. | ||
I totally agree. | ||
And look, it... | ||
We're seemingly in a fairly intractable position, but I think I speak for all of us when I say we just want the genocide to stop, the ongoing war to end, and for every person in the entire region to be able to fulfill their destiny and not be held down by this endless war or threat of war that has kept that whole area in absolute destitution and helplessness for such a long time. | ||
And again, you talk about Israel, and it's like, I mean, they are diametrically opposed to the values we're supposed to hold dear as Americans. | ||
So our alliance with them is just inexplicable without, as you point out, and make a very good point that all this money comes back to convince us that they're such good allies. | ||
It wouldn't be necessary if it was imminently true. | ||
Thank you very much for coming on. | ||
Ahmed Hussam. | ||
I hope I'm pronouncing that right. | ||
Propandco.com on Twitter at Propandco. | ||
Thanks so much for joining us today, sir. | ||
Hey, thanks so much for having me. | ||
If I can just say a big thank you to you and all the other proud American patriots on the right who are speaking up for Gaza to bring an end to this genocide. | ||
This immoral, disgusting tragedy by these supremacists that need to be stopped. | ||
So I just want to commend you and those on the right that are increasingly speaking out against Israel. | ||
So thank you so much. | ||
Well, thank you. | ||
And again, we're complicit in this. | ||
It's our government that gives them the shield to do it. | ||
So we sort of have a moral obligation to speak up against this. | ||
Prop and Co. | ||
on Twitter. | ||
PropandCo.com is the website. | ||
Go check out some of their productions. | ||
You will not be disappointed. | ||
We'll be back on the other side with Peyton Kelly. | ||
We're joined by Peyton Kelly on the other side of a commercial break. | ||
In this first five minutes, I want to talk a little bit about the Democrats, the godforsaken Democrats. | ||
Let's go to clip number two here. | ||
This is David Hogg revealing what he knows about who was controlling the White House under Joe Biden. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
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Nice to meet you. | |
This is Project Veritas exclusive, vice chair of the DNC. | ||
unidentified
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The foundational question for me is, like, how corrupt is the DNC? | |
So many people knew, or few people knew about Biden. | ||
Well, the president of the United States. | ||
I mean, I think the fact that the DNC is always going to be, like, a campaign arm of the president, ultimately. | ||
The bigger issue was, like, the inner circle that was without Biden. | ||
That's it. | ||
And I can't stress, I can't stress you enough. | ||
Like, Jill Biden's chief of staff, like, had an enormous amount of power. | ||
Jill Biden? | ||
unidentified
|
Jill Biden's chief of staff. | |
That was, like, an open secret. | ||
Like, I would avoid him. | ||
unidentified
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Like, he was scary. | |
What was his name? | ||
Um, Anthony. | ||
I've never seen him. | ||
Exactly. | ||
unidentified
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What do you mean? | |
He's just like a shadowy, like, wizard of Oz type figure. | ||
That's what made him so, like, I knew how he looked, but I'm like, the general probably wouldn't know how this man looked. | ||
But he wielded an enormous amount of power, and I can't just go see how much power he had in the White House. | ||
Do you ever notice... | ||
Do you ever notice that Democrats only ever say this stuff after it's exposed publicly? | ||
Do you ever notice that? | ||
That it's only when it blows up in their faces do they admit that they've known the entire time. | ||
Never once in the entirety of Biden's administration did anybody from the Democrat Party come out and go, who the hell's this guy? | ||
Jill Biden's handyman is running the White House? | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
The wife of the president's chief of staff? | ||
Is the one running things? | ||
This is unacceptable. | ||
Why are we allowing this? | ||
They would never say that. | ||
Just like they wouldn't admit that Biden was clearly in mental decline until it was undeniable in your face and destroyed his campaign after the first debate. | ||
Because they're despicable liars. | ||
They're all despicable liars, including David Hogg. | ||
And to me, sort of the big takeaway from seeing what Project Veritas has come out with is just how And not that this was a revelation, but the level of incompetence and ineptitude that exists in the DNC. | ||
I mean, I didn't need an undercover video to tell me that David Hogg doesn't know what the hell he's talking about. | ||
But I mean, they literally have no idea what the hell is going on, what they should think. | ||
Everything they believe, everything they know is delivered to them from on high. | ||
And everything they say, and I'm, you know, I don't want to exaggerate. | ||
But this is how crazy it is. | ||
Everything they say is prepackaged and prepared. | ||
Even in that clip, David Hogg is going, well, it was the team around Biden. | ||
It was the people right around him. | ||
And it's like, yeah, we know. | ||
We've heard the talking points. | ||
Jake Tapper came out with the book. | ||
And the talking point is, it was this team around Joe Biden. | ||
They're responsible of everything. | ||
It wasn't the media that covered up for them. | ||
It wasn't the Democrat activists that knew that Biden was incompetent and refused to admit it or knew that decisions were being made without his Competent approval and allowed it to go forward. | ||
It was this small team around Biden. | ||
They get the talking points. | ||
They repeat the talking points. | ||
That is the whole and total encapsulation of their understanding of the situation as it lies. | ||
Now, I don't know whether that's just a total lack of intellectual curiosity. | ||
They don't ask questions. | ||
They just deliver the answers that have been pre-programmed into them. | ||
It really is NPC-brained. | ||
And at the end of the day, Again, they wouldn't be able to get away with this if it weren't for the deliberate dumbing down of the American people and all of this being hidden from the American people as it is studiously and deliberately ignored by the mainstream media and therefore doesn't exist for the American people because they don't see it on TV. | ||
It's not real. | ||
If they don't see it delivered by Jake Tapper, then how could it be true? | ||
By the way, I tried to listen to the Jake Tapper book. | ||
Have you heard that guy's voice? | ||
Have you ever heard Jake Tapper talk? | ||
I mean, I would have listened to his book. | ||
I was interested to hear from the other side, hear what the lies they were telling. | ||
But Jake Tapper narrated his own audiobook. | ||
how is anybody going to listen to Jake Tapper for four hours straight? | ||
unidentified
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We'll be right back. | |
Welcome back ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Third hour is on. | ||
This is the American show. | ||
I'm your host Harrison Smith, joined today by Peyton Kelly. | ||
Peyton Kelly has quickly risen to prominence online with her videos on X and Instagram. | ||
You can follow her on both those platforms at HeyKells. | ||
She calls herself a right-wing Christian extremist, which I like, which I'm in favor of. | ||
Peyton, welcome to the show. | ||
Hey Harrison, good to talk to you. | ||
Thanks for having me. | ||
Well, it's my pleasure. | ||
I've been following you for a while, but you sort of blew up recently. | ||
You've had a couple videos. | ||
Go totally viral and a lot of people are seeing them. | ||
And so I thought I'd bring you on and just talk about your path to becoming a right-wing influencer, if you will. | ||
Not to degrade your work. | ||
That feels lame to say. | ||
But how did you get started doing this? | ||
What are the topics that you cover on the videos that you make? | ||
So I've actually been doing this for a while. | ||
I started mostly on TikTok and I was... | ||
During the election, I fought really hard to get Trump elected, and I started seeing some of the stuff going on with Israel and the occupation, you know, basically Israeli occupation of the U.S. I started talking about that on TikTok, and I started getting banned from TikTok. | ||
I've been banned two times now, so I totally gave up on TikTok, decided to move to X. And I am a little less black-pilled, I would say, about Trump when it comes as far as, like, the anti-Israel crowd. | ||
I try to stay very nuanced about it. | ||
I personally like Trump, and I'm like you. | ||
I hope for the best. | ||
I'm hoping that he knows what's going on and he makes the right decisions. | ||
But I'm also very honest about it and open when I don't like the things that he's doing. | ||
That video that went viral... | ||
and everyone was like, what? | ||
This is like a total 180 from what he was doing. | ||
And ever since then, it's kind of just been an emotional roller coaster. | ||
I don't really know what to think. | ||
Right, no, I'm exactly the same way. | ||
Same reason I wanted to bring Ahmed on, because it's like, okay, seems like it's going well, but we're hearing that things are happening that don't ever come to fruition, and at the same time that they're, you know, making all these strident statements, it seems like what's going on in Gaza is just sort of continuing at a pace. | ||
So I'm just trying to, like, glean the truth from the fiction, like, you know, separate the wheat from the chaff, what's actually happening here, and it's really hard. | ||
To figure out. | ||
So, I mean, what do you think the strategy is that Trump is pursuing? | ||
Because I totally forgot until you just mentioned it. | ||
You're right. | ||
Last week, they were saying Trump's going to recognize a Palestinian state. | ||
Nobody got excited about that. | ||
And then it completely left my mind. | ||
Nobody wrote about it. | ||
I mean, where do you think these rumors are coming from? | ||
How do you, as a content creator, how do you determine what's true and what's false as you go to present a story? | ||
At this point, it's really difficult to even tell what's real and what's false. | ||
So everything I present, I do it with skepticism and say, look, we don't know if this is legit or not. | ||
We just have to keep taking in the pieces and seeing what happens. | ||
Because then this week they said that Trump was going to relocate one million Palestinians. | ||
So that doesn't sound like he's trying to acknowledge Palestine as a state. | ||
But which one do you believe? | ||
You know, because the media is all owned by the Zionists and the Jews. | ||
And then the dissidents obviously want to believe that Israel is going to lose in this situation. | ||
unidentified
|
So you have to be very careful who you trust. | |
Yeah, or just don't trust anybody and just look at their actions. | ||
But obviously, so what... | ||
What made you change? | ||
Was it just the fact that you were banned for talking about this stuff? | ||
Because I'm just noticing this giant cultural shift, not only in the awareness of, you know, Israel's control over our government that apparently people were blind to until last year, which... | ||
But also, you know, you've just come out with a video about white genocide and that people are recognizing, hey, white people aren't invulnerable. | ||
We're not invincible. | ||
And there's a lot of people out there in positions of power that openly state they want our destruction. | ||
Why are we okay with that? | ||
Why are we not standing up against that? | ||
I mean, there's this big cultural shift happening right now. | ||
What do you attribute that to? | ||
Like, where do you think it goes from here? | ||
And like, how does your personal story sort of align with that? | ||
I think that a lot of people started waking up after October 7th. | ||
So the first wave of waking up as far as the conservative movement happened, obviously, during COVID. | ||
And we started researching during COVID. | ||
We realized, hey, there's some weird stuff going on with this. | ||
Maybe we can't really trust the government at all. | ||
And then there was a second wave of waking up that came after October 7th when everyone started digging into Israel actually has a lot of power and influence over our country. | ||
And it seems like most of the decisions we're making are to benefit Israel. | ||
And it's people that, you know, have Israeli allegiance that own our banks and our media and Hollywood and big pharma and the list goes on. | ||
So as you start digging deeper into that stuff, there's just no way to deny that we are basically occupied. | ||
Yeah, that's how I was phrasing it earlier in the show. | ||
I said we need a new Declaration of Independence because it's so inconsistent. | ||
It's so arbitrary, like what they choose to enforce and what they don't. | ||
I was making the point earlier that, you know, Marco Rubio is saying we're going to, you know, not issue visas to these countries that, you know, impose censorship on people. | ||
But then he's talking about not issuing visas to people who criticize Israel, and Israel is the number one country imposing censorship on America. | ||
I mean, the former justice minister of Israel was on the Facebook oversight board when they kicked the president of the United States off. | ||
So it's just completely inconsistent, totally hypocritical, and I think people are seeing through it. | ||
How real do you think this awakening is, though? | ||
Because I also, just like I have to sort of caution myself and go, okay, Trump seems like what he's doing here is good. | ||
But is it really? | ||
Let me not get too excited or optimistic. | ||
In the same way, I see my X feed has certainly changed character in the last couple of years. | ||
But do you think that's as widespread as it seems? | ||
Or are we getting sort of a perspective bias from being in the bubble that we're in from being on X and following all the same people? | ||
It's definitely possible that we are in a perspective bubble. | ||
I think that they also like to control both sides of the narrative. | ||
So you have to be very careful. | ||
You know, how much you're listening to each side. | ||
I've noticed that too, that it doesn't seem completely organic, the amount of people that are turning against Israel and the Jews right now. | ||
And obviously there is a lot of truth to the things that are coming out and that are being said, but it could go too far the other direction where this is all a plan to do who knows what, you know, create more victimization of Israel or something. | ||
Well, yeah, and that is the thing, right? | ||
is that if they export a million Gazans to somewhere in Europe and that makes it less safe for Jews, then they're more likely to go to Israel. | ||
I mean, they really... | ||
And as I always point out, anti-Semitism, not only is it a great way to silence critics of Jewish people, but it's also a great way to separate Jewish people from everybody else and say, you're not an American. | ||
You're with us. | ||
You're a Jew first and American second. | ||
Don't ever forget that. | ||
Look at all the anti-Semitism around. | ||
So it's useful for people that want control. | ||
So how do we stop it from going too far? | ||
Because while I don't think we should be like, We're censoring ourselves out of the fear that it eventually goes too far. | ||
You know, obviously, I always try to make the argument in a very straightforward way, like, I don't like Israel because they're killing babies. | ||
If they'd stop killing babies, I wouldn't really have an issue with them. | ||
But, like, look at what they're doing. | ||
I don't like that. | ||
I don't like being censored. | ||
I don't like the First Amendment being curtailed for any religion. | ||
So, you know, I always try to make that argument, but obviously a lot of people just get angry. | ||
They see what's going on and just... | ||
If they're going to say it about us, we'll say it about them. | ||
And, you know, they just want to return fire for fire. | ||
How do we make this argument without causing more division or driving people away who would otherwise, you know, be interested in standing up for innocent people, standing up for, you know, the South Africans who are being genocided, the white South African farmers? | ||
Like, how do we how do we handle this conversation without going over the edge or pushing too far or being overtly offensive and damaging our own cause? | ||
How do we do that? | ||
This is something that I have actually been asking myself lately, too, because it's so easy to get too far in one direction when you're upset and you're angry and there are people on the opposite side are attacking you and then you're attacking them. | ||
And we're going to have to find some kind of even ground here. | ||
I know that there's a lot of Jewish people that are on the act. | ||
On the anti-Israel side that are very smart. | ||
Also the other way around, you know. | ||
But the Judeo-Christian thing is, it's separating at this point. | ||
And we need to figure out how to get everybody to work together and get on the same page. | ||
But a lot of the pro-Israel crowd is not realizing how they're not separating their faith from God. | ||
Just because you're of a specific faith doesn't mean you have to support a genocide. | ||
It doesn't mean you have to support... | ||
So you don't really have to support anything that has to do with government in pertaining to your faith. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
Or even if you are a member of that country, which again, it's the game they play where if you say, hey, I don't like what Israel's doing, I don't support this, I think this is bad, and frankly, I think it's evil, they go, oh, you hate all Jews. | ||
And it's like, all right, well, I say the same thing about the American government and I love America more than anything. | ||
So it just I think it's about breaking breaking the mold, I guess, and just being able to come out and just forcefully say what is right without. | ||
And I can't remember who I was watching yesterday, but it's just, it's worth, you know, re-emphasizing. | ||
That's just like, it's mostly cowardice why people don't talk like you, why people don't talk like me. | ||
They think this stuff, they know this stuff to be true, but they're just afraid to say it. | ||
Same thing with like the anti-white racism stuff, which again, your latest video is on and you had trouble uploading it. | ||
And I don't know if it got banned or censored places, but like clearly people will frame you as a white supremacist if you... | ||
My white child is going to grow up as a despised minority in his own country. | ||
I don't deserve that. | ||
And they go, oh, you know, you just you want to hang black people from a tree. | ||
And it's like, what? | ||
What are we talking about? | ||
I mean, I guess that's part of the play, isn't it? | ||
Is that they they sort of force you to the extreme. | ||
So they take. | ||
Your very normal views and they extrapolate out and go, oh, you must be a white supremacist that's a Nazi and wants to load Jews onto train cars. | ||
And it's like, I just don't want war. | ||
Why do we have to take it so far? | ||
So it's difficult and I don't know how we do it other than just inspire confidence in people and say, hey, you're not bad for defending yourself and you're not bad for protesting this stuff. | ||
You're right. | ||
This stuff is wrong and you don't have to stand for it even when people try to browbeat you. | ||
Was it? | ||
Was it hard for you to have the confidence to do that or to, you know, get over the danger of saying this stuff publicly or did that come naturally to you? | ||
Originally, I would say it comes naturally, but then as people start attacking you and I recently had someone reach out to, I don't even know how they found it. | ||
I have totally locked down my Facebook since then because I don't know if they like dug deep enough years back to find where I work because I don't have where I work on Facebook. | ||
But people were writing to my boss saying, you know, Peyton is a Twitter Nazi. | ||
And I'm sure I'll have people writing in saying, Peyton is a racist white supremacist and all kinds of crazy stuff. | ||
And the problem is a lot of people, even on the right, like the conservatives that are pro-Israel, have kind of taken on the leftist playbook from a few years ago where they were like, you're racist. | ||
Like if we disagree with them on anything, they call us a racist. | ||
And now they've turned that into you're an anti-Semite. | ||
And that really makes people want to just fight back more and be even more ridiculous with it. | ||
You know, that's the problem is that then people just start being like, OK, sure. | ||
Yeah, that's what I am then. | ||
Right. | ||
And to me, that's always weird to just like, look, I'm not going to let anybody make me hate anybody. | ||
I don't hate anybody. | ||
And like, but it's but I totally understand the instinct where someone's like. | ||
You're a racist. | ||
And the interesting thing is to be like, so what? | ||
I am. | ||
Screw you. | ||
But it's like, but I'm not. | ||
So I'm not going to make, just like I'm not going to make, you know, or just like I'm not going to let, you know, Jewish people tell me I can't talk about Israel because it's anti-Semitic. | ||
You know, I'm not going to make people, I'm not going to let people make me hate Jews because I don't like Israel. | ||
It's like, no, I'm just, I'm going to love everybody and hate the bad people doing the bad things. | ||
It's not actually that difficult, but it gets confusing. | ||
And of course, the new term is the woke right. | ||
Are you a member of the woke right? | ||
Are you now or have you ever been a member of the woke right? | ||
Peyton Kelly, this is the new talking point. | ||
I mean, it's totally ineffective, though. | ||
What do you think about the woke right term that they've come up with to try to discredit us? | ||
Because I think you're right. | ||
It's just a tactic of the left, and now it's people on the right using it. | ||
It's such a projection because it's the people that aren't on the woke right that are using all of these leftist tactics to say, hey, you can't talk about Israel. | ||
You can't talk about the Jews that are in power and are overrepresented in the U.S. You can't talk about any of this stuff. | ||
And if you do, then you are woke, right? | ||
And it makes no sense because this is, Right. | ||
No, it exactly is. | ||
And of course, there's a term that's always stuck in my mind. | ||
I love it. | ||
I think it's perfect. | ||
Celebration parallax, right? | ||
Where if you are a Jewish organization and you're saying, look how overrepresented we are in all of these different things, and what a good thing, then you're celebrated and you're powerful and good. | ||
But you can literally say exactly the same thing, and if you don't say it in an approving fashion, then you're evil and you're bad. | ||
It's just the truth. | ||
It's just the facts. | ||
We can debate whether it's true or not, but you can say the exact same thing and get a totally different reaction depending on whether you approve of the thing you're talking about or disapprove of the thing you're talking about. | ||
Right. | ||
It's just exhausting. | ||
Like, what do we have to just not talk about any of this stuff ever again? | ||
How do we get over this hump and deal with the problems that Americans are facing that are actually real? | ||
How do we do that? | ||
unidentified
|
I have no idea what to tell you on that one, Harrison. | |
I really have no clue. | ||
I know. | ||
That's like the golden question, right, that we're all trying to figure out. | ||
Like, how do we deal with all this stuff without it boiling over and turning into something too insane? | ||
I'm really not sure. | ||
Yeah, I don't know either. | ||
And, you know, that's why I get so frustrated at Trump. | ||
Even though I like a lot of what he's doing, I'm always going to celebrate when he does good things. | ||
Apparently, just yesterday, he cut $700 million from the bird flu vaccine that was being developed. | ||
It's like, good, heck yeah, that's a great step forward. | ||
But it's like, is he taking it seriously enough? | ||
Is he really approaching this stuff with the aggressiveness that he should be? | ||
And if not, why not? | ||
There's just so much, I think, frustration on the right that we can work our butts off, we can sacrifice everything to get a victory, and then Congress just twiddles their thumbs and we don't get anything, and then we get called racist for pointing out that they're destroying or killing white people in South Africa. | ||
It's like, how do we get the right wing? | ||
I mean, do you think there's a political solution to this? | ||
Because the point of this is that... | ||
I don't think a civil war or more conflict between Americans is going to solve anything. | ||
I think we have external enemies that are waiting for us to sort of devolve into chaos so they can attack. | ||
We got wolves outside the door waiting for the civil war to start. | ||
So that's not a possibility. | ||
How do we solve this politically? | ||
Is that even a possibility anymore? | ||
I see a lot of people on Twitter basically calling me stupid for desperately wanting a political solution. | ||
But it's like there has to be. | ||
If there's not a political solution, there's no solution, right? | ||
That's how I see it. | ||
Do you see it differently? | ||
When it comes to the issue of the U.S. and Israel specifically, it seems like we would have to get almost every politician out and totally start over, you know, because Thomas Massey is the only one that isn't. | ||
Bought by Israel. | ||
I just saw today that the ADL trains every new FBI agent. | ||
Like, it's so deeply embedded at this point that, I mean, we would just have to start with a clean slate. | ||
I wish and I hope that there's a better solution than that, but I haven't been able to think of anything because it's gone so far. | ||
Yeah, we tried unplugging the government and plugging it back in, see if that works. | ||
I know. | ||
And that is the thing. | ||
It's simultaneously so simple and impossibly complicated, right? | ||
Simultaneously, it's like, here's the solution. | ||
Let's get rid of foreign influence. | ||
Let's ban these groups that represent foreign interests. | ||
AIPAC shouldn't exist, or it should have to register under FARA and be treated like any other foreign lobbying group. | ||
And it's like, that seems so simple, but then it's like, okay, what do you have to do to accomplish that? | ||
You've got to replace every congressman, every senator, every news reporter, the president of every bank, because otherwise they're not going to let that happen. | ||
So it's like, this is the frustration. | ||
It's so simple and impossibly complicated at the same time, which is why I guess it's an information war. | ||
If we can get this information out and inform enough people about what's really going on, then those simple solutions, I guess, become more palatable and achievable. | ||
But, man, it's frustrating, isn't it? | ||
It is frustrating. | ||
And I want to say that I have been watching Infowars since I was like 19 years old. | ||
I was trying to remember how I even heard about you guys. | ||
And I think I saw a sticker on a light pole one time that said Infowars.com. | ||
That'll do it. | ||
And I went and I was just instantly hooked. | ||
And now I'm about to be 33 and I've never stopped watching you guys. | ||
And the Infowar has never ended. | ||
In all of those years, and I'm not sure if the Infowar will ever end, but at least it keeps you guys in a job. | ||
You know, we'll keep fighting and doing the best we can to, you know, end corruption and whatever else. | ||
Well, the price of liberty is eternal vigilance. | ||
Think about that, folks. | ||
Some person out there went to Infowars.com, got a sticker, slapped it on a light pole. | ||
Here we are, whatever, 15 years later. | ||
And Peyton Kelly is a content maker helping to, you know, spread the truth about what's going on in the American government. | ||
And yeah, no, the info war is very real. | ||
And more people are waking up to it. | ||
And I guess part of us should be, you know, happy and, you know, focused on the optimism and celebrating how far we've come. | ||
I mean, it's really unimaginable. | ||
the awareness people have now of the atrazine in the water, the poisons, the chemtrails. | ||
But at the same time, we're like, we're not done. | ||
We have so much farther to go. | ||
Nobody's taking it as seriously as they should. | ||
So I'm so happy people like yourself are, you know, Again, people can follow Peyton Kelly on Instagram at PeyKells. | ||
Same on Twitter, P-A-Y-K-E-L-L-S. | ||
And I know you just did your latest one about white genocide. | ||
What else are you working on now? | ||
Where's your focus going here? | ||
I'm thinking that my next video might actually be about, um, But I've been researching like phenbenzine and ivermectin for cancer treatment. | ||
And it's very strange. | ||
I also learned that the PET scans that they use to figure out like where the cancer cells are in your body are basically just sugar and then when it hits a cancer cell that cancer cell starts you know, freaking out and gobbling it up, which sounds like parasites to me also, but I'm going to dig deeper into it. | ||
I have some really cool, like, testimonials that I'm going to share. | ||
So I just think it's information, like, good, valuable information that people need to know that they're not going to hear from their doctor. | ||
And it's very... | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to go a little bit outside of my norm with the next video here. | |
That's what makes you a true info warrior. | ||
These things are not just separate. | ||
We can jump from talking about Israeli control of America to cancer being parasites. | ||
This is all one drive, one campaign in the information war. | ||
Peyton Kelly, thank you so much for joining us today. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
and this is the American Journal Infowars.com band.video you can follow me on x at Harrison H. Smith and don't forget to go to thealexjonesstore.com get yourself Ultimate Life Force it's our newest product available on sale now introductory price on discount almost 50 well 50% off with monthly savings okay I was gonna say I was like wait 50% off 50% off if you | ||
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You don't have a shortage of lizard venom, which is why you're fat. | ||
And so you're making up for it. | ||
It made me think of a holistic doctor my family used to go to who would say, if you have a headache, it's not because your body is experiencing Tylenol withdrawal, Tylenol shortage. | ||
If you're dehydrated, it's because your body needs water. | ||
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I got a lot of news to get to still in this last segment, and I want to go now. | ||
To another video of the Democrat top brass. | ||
It's funny because it's true. | ||
You know, the likes of David Hogg, vice chair of the DNC. | ||
It's just, you know, appropriate. | ||
No, it's very appropriate. | ||
There's another strategy they've taken. | ||
Another social media influencer that they've appointed to a position of power. | ||
It's a woman named Olivia, I guess. | ||
The Democrats figured out, it took them a while, but eventually the Democrats did figure out that hating men wasn't a great strategy for getting elected. | ||
That demonizing masculinity itself doesn't play all that well with A, men, or B, women who like men. | ||
So, it wasn't the best tactic to pursue over the last decade or so, demonizing men, hating men. | ||
Making policies that are anti-male. | ||
I mean, it's not paying off. | ||
It's not paying dividends at the end. | ||
So they're trying to figure out how to maintain that course. | ||
How to continue hating and discriminating against men while getting men to vote for them. | ||
Because they're not going to change. | ||
Because they still believe all the crap they believe. | ||
And at the core of their entire ideology and belief system is the hatred that weakness feels for strength. | ||
We talk about this all the time. | ||
Strong people want other strong people around. | ||
When you're strong spiritually, mentally, or physically, you're not threatened by other people that are strong. | ||
You're uplifted by them, right? | ||
Yes, that's what's going on in my brain every time I talk to another intelligent person. | ||
You want people to be smart. | ||
You want people to be informed. | ||
You want people to be physically powerful because it's, But when you're weak, when you're weak and cowardly and stupid, smart, brave, strong people are very scary. | ||
So the core of the belief system, the heart of the leftist movement, is a tearing down of exceptionalism, of bringing everybody to the middle or lower, if you can manage it. | ||
It's a lot harder to uplift the people than it is to degrade another. | ||
Class of people, right? | ||
If I give you the challenge of creating equality in a school, it's going to be a hell of a lot easier to disadvantage the intelligent hard workers, distract and crush them, than it is to teach the bad students to be smarter and more dedicated. | ||
It's just a fact of reality, right? | ||
And it's one of those metaphysical realities where it's always harder to do the right thing. | ||
Always. | ||
It's weird. | ||
That's how God made the world. | ||
It's always harder to do the right thing. | ||
It's always more difficult to raise a kid to be responsible and productive and upstanding than it is to raise a kid that's a criminal and a scumbag. | ||
It's easy to raise a kid that's a criminal and scumbag. | ||
It's really hard to raise a kid who's not. | ||
And that's just the way the world is. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
We have chosen to take on the challenges and actually try to improve things rather than tear things down, even though it's maybe not as easy or as satisfying as destruction. | ||
All this is to say that the left has a problem because their core ideological belief is at odds with anybody who is intelligent and strong and thoughtful and loving. | ||
You don't want to be with the Democrats. | ||
They're trying to fix this perception. | ||
And that's as far as they're willing to go, the perception. | ||
They don't want to change anything fundamentally. | ||
They want people to stop paying attention to how stupid and bad they are. | ||
And they admit this. | ||
They go, Jake Tapper knocks lefty podcaster for implying his son is racist for wanting to be a cop. | ||
This is why you effers are losing. | ||
Why do you say you effers? | ||
You are one of them. | ||
You are one of them, Jake Tapper. | ||
By the way, your son's a groiper. | ||
Deal with that. | ||
So, they have Tim Walz go out and go, I was the code speaker for, or code talker. | ||
I was the white male. | ||
I was going to bring in white men to make them feel comfortable voting for Democrat. | ||
Like, well, you failed because you're a fat twink. | ||
Can there be such a thing as a fat twink? | ||
If there is, Tim Walz has won and nobody fell for it. | ||
This is the... | ||
Look at all these manly men. | ||
Can't you just feel the testosterone? | ||
We don't have to hear the audio. | ||
You can just see from the image that these are not the manliest of men, let's just say. | ||
Well, now Democrat activist Olivia Juliana is advising the DNC on what they need to do to win young men back. | ||
And this... | ||
I haven't even watched it. | ||
That's how crazy it is. | ||
It's so crazy. | ||
I watched 10 seconds of it and was like, alright, I gotta put this on the show. | ||
Because it's so crazy. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
Let's go to the video. | ||
This is, I don't know, maybe Olivia comes in later, but it's a Democrat activist talking about what they need to do to target young men. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
The reason why Republican messaging resonates with men is because men want bad things. | |
Let me stop you right there, buddy. | ||
You wonder why you're not doing well with men. | ||
The first statement out of your mouth is Republicans do well with men because men want bad things. | ||
Do you see what I mean? | ||
They want to capture the male demographic. | ||
But in their heart of hearts, they deeply, deeply despise everything men are about. | ||
They actually think that manliness, the things that come from testosterone, are bad. | ||
They're bad. | ||
But in a weird way, they're retarded. | ||
Let's go back to the video. | ||
He's about to say the things that he thinks men like that are bad and try to square this with everything the Democrats push. | ||
Let's go back to the hypocrite. | ||
unidentified
|
It's like, men want to have sex and, like, own women, right? | |
Like, they want to dominate everybody, and Republicans say, you get to do that, and then Democrats can't say that, so we just lost men, it's over, right? | ||
Like, what are you talking about? | ||
Like, a lot of times it will be men that are liberals who will, like, agree with that shit. | ||
I'm like, dude, what are you, like, what is going on? | ||
Like, there's a lot of men that don't think that way, obviously, and it's just such a negative view to take on, like, half of the human race. | ||
Yeah, it is such a negative view to take on half the human race. | ||
This is what I mean. | ||
It's so crazy. | ||
He's like, the things men want are bad, and men are evil, and it's so wrong to have that view of half the human race. | ||
The view you just expressed? | ||
What are you saying? | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
And it's hilarious. | ||
I should bring it in. | ||
I don't even think I played it yesterday. | ||
Yesterday I had a video of Pete... | ||
Mayor Pete. | ||
Stinky Pete, we call him. | ||
Sneaky. | ||
Sneaky Pete. | ||
Sneaky Pete. | ||
Transportation director came out to say what he thought men were interested in and how to pitch the Democrats to young men. | ||
And it was porn and abortion and gay marriage, literally. | ||
So, do you see a little bit of a disconnect? | ||
That they're like, you know, men want these bad things like sex. | ||
It's like, okay, but your whole platform for men is that And gay marriage is really about sex, isn't it? | ||
At the end of the day, it doesn't matter how gay you are. | ||
If you aren't having sex with men, you're not really gay, though, are you? | ||
It's sort of an action. | ||
It's sort of an action that you take. | ||
So there's just something utterly inconsistent and baffling about this. | ||
Like, men are bad. | ||
They like sex. | ||
So our pitch to them is they get to watch porn if they vote for us. | ||
It's like, what are you saying? | ||
Men are bad and it's wrong to discriminate against half the human race like that? | ||
Have you ever heard yourself talk? | ||
You ever said something and then went back and listened to it and tried to think whether it made any sense or not? | ||
I don't think they have. | ||
We'll go back to this video. | ||
I'll show you the sneaky Pete video on the other side. | ||
But, yeah, the woman on the left is the... | ||
And that's wrong, and we're delivering it to you, I guess is their pitch. | ||
It is inconsistent and mindless because they're trying to do the impossible, appeal to the people they hate. | ||
This isn't going to work. | ||
Let's go back to Olivia Juliana, who's going to tell us. | ||
You know this because we know each other in real life, but I spend a lot of time on college campuses, and I spend a lot of time with young men. | ||
unidentified
|
You love young men. | |
I love young men. | ||
I love frat guys. | ||
And in that, I've realized, like, even the ones that identify as conservative are almost always pro-choice. | ||
They're almost always pro-gay marriage. | ||
You'd be surprised at the number of them who supported Black Lives Matter. | ||
And so I feel like people just kind of lump them into this box when the truth is, again, a lot of them are with us on the issues. | ||
They're just not part of our coalition because they feel like they're not welcomed in it. | ||
Gee, I wonder. | ||
I wonder why they don't feel welcome. | ||
Donald Trump Jr. says, I 100% endorse this DIM activist being put in charge of DIM's campaign to appeal to young men. | ||
Yeah, no, she clearly has her finger on the pulse, 100%. | ||
I think the Democrats are on the right track. | ||
I think David Hogg as your vice chair, Olivia whatever as the outreach to young men, I think this is a recipe for success. | ||
Nothing says, you know, power like an obese woman and a deathly thin man castigating young men. | ||
For being the way they are and how they were born. | ||
This is going to work great for you guys. | ||
Let's go to Sneaky Pete now. | ||
I just dropped it in there. | ||
Buttigieg thinks the left can win back young men with a couple of policies. | ||
Let's listen. | ||
unidentified
|
Of course we should be talking about how, yes, if, you know, It wouldn't be possible, not just for gay people to get married, but for straight people to get divorced, let alone birth control or how he would want to regulate porn or whatever most people would have a problem with. | |
Yeah, it's going to be handmaid's tale, you guys. | ||
It's going to be handmaid's tale. | ||
It's terrible. | ||
It's just terrible. | ||
Yes, they're not doing well. | ||
So the Democrats are... | ||
And again, we could delve into that forever because it is a very hilarious can of worms to watch the Democrats try to undo their decade of blatantly demonizing masculinity itself. | ||
I mean, they came up with a term for it, toxic masculinity, which was men doing literally anything and just actively discriminating against men and white men in particular. | ||
And it's like, do... | ||
Yeah, probably. | ||
If you ask them, do Black Lives Matter, they'll be like, yeah, cops shouldn't kill people. | ||
It's like, but are they happy that they're not getting jobs anymore because Black Lives Matter demanded that corporations exclusively, deliberately discriminate against white people? | ||
Yeah, I don't think so. | ||
And this is like a weird thing with this, with like what's going on right now, is that you have, yesterday, there was a whistleblower. | ||
This is very weird. | ||
I thought I had it up here, but I might just have to go off memory. | ||
But you had a whistleblower come out and reveal that the Biden administration had farm subsidies that were denied to white males. | ||
White men were denied a government service because of their race and sex. | ||
And it's like, a whistleblower said that? | ||
What do you mean a whistleblower? | ||
They made ads with that. | ||
I mean, they bragged about that. | ||
They wrote a bill specifically to do that thing. | ||
So, like, we're in this very weird existence where, like, you know, Biden's race-based loans hurt white farmers. | ||
Whistleblower and exclusive. | ||
That headline. | ||
What the hell are you talking? | ||
Biden's race-based loans hurt farmers? | ||
Hurt white farmers? | ||
Yeah, it was race-based loans. | ||
What? | ||
Yeah, obviously. | ||
They're like, yeah, we're going to have race-based loans. | ||
And then they're like, oh my god, these loans are race-based. | ||
I don't get what is their malfunction. | ||
What is going on these days? | ||
Literally, you have whistleblowers, and we've seen this before, right? | ||
Undercover video shows Biden's immigration is causing the white share of the population to decrease. | ||
It's like, yeah, he brags about it. | ||
This is what they brag about. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
I don't know what they're trying to pull here or if it'll work. | ||
But it's like they literally have programs to discriminate against white men. | ||
It's the whole point of those programs. | ||
What do you think DEI is? | ||
What do you think ESG is? | ||
What do you think affirmative action is? | ||
I mean, these things only exist to discriminate against white people and against men. | ||
Are you surprised that they discriminate against white people and men? | ||
I mean, what are you surprised about? | ||
Genuinely, what are you blowing the whistle on? | ||
They're called race-based loans. | ||
Hello? | ||
I mean, I don't get it. | ||
I don't get it, okay? | ||
Minority. | ||
I mean, when they say minority, it means non-white. | ||
When they say BIPOC, it means non-white. | ||
All of these things just mean non-white. | ||
So when they say we're going to have free home loans for, you know, first-time minority homebuyers, it means they're discriminating against white people. | ||
Do I have to explain? | ||
I mean, what are we doing here? | ||
What is this? | ||
What are they confused about? | ||
And this is where it eventually ends up, or has been for a while now, if you want to know the truth. | ||
Grading for equity coming to San Francisco high schools this fall. | ||
Remember what I was saying about how easy it is to bring down the top rather than bring up the bottom? | ||
Without seeking approval of the San Francisco Board of Education, Superintendent of Schools Maria Sue plans to unveil a new Grading for Equity plan on Tuesday that will go into effect this fall at 14 high schools and cover 10,000 students. | ||
The school district is already negotiating with an outside consultant to train teachers in August in a system that awards a passing C grade to as low of a score as 41 on a 100 point exam. | ||
40. If you get a 41 on your test. | ||
That's average. | ||
That's still passing. | ||
That's still passing. | ||
You can get nearly two-thirds of the question wrong and pass the test. | ||
Modern mathematics confronts its white patriarchal past. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Were it not for an intrepid school board member, the drastic change in grading with implications for college admissions and career readiness would have gone unnoticed and unexplained. | ||
It is buried in a three-word phrase in the last page of a PowerPoint presentation embedded in the school board meeting's 25-page agenda. | ||
The plan comes during last week of the spring semester while parents are assessing the impact of over $100 million in budget reductions and deciding whether to remain in the public schools this fall. | ||
While the school district acknowledges that parents are, Oh, they've called it off after a single day. | ||
Yeah, right. | ||
Yeah, right. | ||
You know what that means? | ||
The headline that just flashed on the screen for our radio viewers, San Francisco Unified School District calls off equity grading plan. | ||
You know what that means, right? | ||
They're renaming it. | ||
No, they're going to rename it. | ||
Okay. | ||
It was the name that was the problem. | ||
That's what they mean. | ||
When they say we really need to communicate this well, what they mean is we need to get this through without people knowing what we're really doing. | ||
And again, just, I mean, can you even think about the downstream effects this is going to have? | ||
The number of ways this is going to screw everything up. | ||
I mean, we've already seen it. | ||
I'm not going to try anymore because why should I? | ||
I get the same grade for doing the bare minimum. | ||
I'm going to do the bare minimum. | ||
So it's not only that you're putting the incompetent, lazy people in a position that they shouldn't be in, where they're going to have high grades, even though they didn't earn it. | ||
So they're going to get accepted to schools they shouldn't be allowed to go to. | ||
So then those schools are either going to have a massive dropout rate or they're going to have to lower their standards in order to, you know, keep the people that they brought in in their schools. | ||
But it also damages the high-achieving people who are being denied the reward for their hard work, who are being kept from appreciating the fruits of their labor. | ||
I mean, this is just... | ||
There's no way these people are this stupid. | ||
There's no way they think this is actually a good idea. | ||
They genuinely just think that if we lower the standards across the board, it can look like everybody's passing, therefore our school is doing well. | ||
It's the difference between perception and reality, and these people live in a world of deception and perception that is completely at odds with anything real. | ||
Meanwhile, Watchdog finds no evidence Biden knew of crucial climate EOs demands answers on who signed the auto pin. | ||
So it's another aspect of the fact that Biden was not competent or even really functional during his entire presidential reign. | ||
And a pro-energy group is renewing its call for an investigation into over half a dozen Biden administration executive orders related to climate that it believes should be deemed null and void due to them being signed by an auto PIN without any public comment from former President Joe Biden confirming his knowledge of them. | ||
I remember this was one of the things that Mike Johnson pointed out when he said he talked to Biden about an executive order he'd signed limiting natural gas production. | ||
And Biden denied ever signing it. | ||
Was like, I never signed that. | ||
I never would sign it. | ||
And then eventually it was reversed because he realized something had been signed without his go-ahead. | ||
So I think safer, you know, better be safe than sorry. | ||
I think it's a, you know, standard practice. | ||
I think Trump should just institute his own executive order that just says absolutely everything Biden did during his administration was a crime. | ||
Undo it all. | ||
None of it counts. | ||
None of it was real. | ||
None of it was implemented by the people that any American voted for. | ||
And so I think you can just undo it all. | ||
I genuinely think he's got to do that. | ||
He's got to just come out and say, we're arresting the people that have the auto pin. | ||
We're arresting people like Alejandro Mayorkas that did this to us. | ||
And everything Biden did is undone. | ||
unidentified
|
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