Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
In a fiery interview on the Tucker Carlson Show on June 30th, 2025, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. dropped bombshell accusations that have been an inevitable conclusion if humanity is to survive the pharma mad science cash machine. | ||
What you would do if you wanted to find the answer, which is to compare outcomes in a fully vaccinated group to health outcomes in an unvaccinated group. | ||
And CDC did that study in 1999. | ||
They brought in a team of scientists under a Belgian researcher named Thomas Verstratten. | ||
And they looked at the data. | ||
They looked at children who had received the hepatitis vaccine within their first 30 days of life and compared those children to children who had received the vaccine later or not at all. | ||
And they found an 11, 135% elevated risk of autism among the vaccinated children. | ||
And it shocked them. | ||
They kept the study secret and they manipulated it through five different iterations to try to bury the link. | ||
And, you know, we know how they did it. | ||
They got rid of all the older children, essentially, and just had younger children who were too young to be diagnosed. | ||
And they stratified the data and they did a lot of other tricks. | ||
Adding fuel to the fire, recent reports reveal that Pfizer has pushed back a critical study on heart damage in children vaccinated with its COVID-19 mRNA vaccines until 2030, despite the CDC admitting the condition as a side effect. | ||
A study that should have been completed in 2023. | ||
unidentified
|
They circulate on purpose, misinformation, so that they will mislead. | |
Who are the people that repressed true information on purpose? | ||
And whilst myocarditis and pericarditis current findings at least convey might affect a small percentage of the population, it's likely they had access to that data long before it was shared. | ||
But Pharma and Fauci are not sleeping as the flames rise higher. | ||
A leaked Bio Vaccine Policy Steering Committee VPSC meeting document from April 3rd, 2025 exposes a calculated strategy by the Biotechnology Innovation Organization, BIO, representing giants like Pfizer and Merck to counter RFK Jr.'s influence amid an FDA regulatory shift. | ||
The memo highlights concerns over RFK Jr.'s impact, proposing to divide the Maha movement from MAGA by enlisting conservative figures like Dr. Oz and Senator Cassidy, funding influencers to discredit him, and lobbying Congress with half of Bio's cash reserves to oust him from a potential Health and Human Services Secretary role. | ||
It also suggests reframing vaccines as national security assets to rebuild public trust, reflecting a profit-driven agenda amidst rising flames of controversy. | ||
What we're alleging is that gain-of-function research was going on in that lab and NIH funded it. | ||
You can't get away from it, it meets your definition, and you are obfuscating the truth. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm not obfuscating the truth. | |
You are the one. | ||
I'm not obfuscating the true nerve. | ||
You are the one. | ||
I'm not obfuscating the true nerve. | ||
You are the one. | ||
Transparency from the pharmaceutical industry has become a sick and deadly joke. | ||
Kennedy's explosive interview, paired with Pfizer's jaw-dropping decision to kick the can down the road on its myocarditis study on children until 2030, is a rallying cry for Americans to demand justice before these psychopaths wipe us all out. | ||
John Bound reporting for Info. | ||
unidentified
|
John Bound reporting for Info. | |
All right, folks, stay with us. | ||
This is Infowars. | ||
Support us at DeAuthJonesStore.com. | ||
We'll be back on the other side with the Daily Dispatch. | ||
unidentified
|
Don't go anywhere. | |
It's Thursday and July 3rd 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. | ||
Okay, three, two, one. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the show. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Bringing to you live this morning from the InfoWars headquarters here in Austin, Texas. | ||
It's Thursday, the 3rd of July. | ||
We'll be taking tomorrow off for obvious reasons to celebrate Independence Day. | ||
No, I didn't even think about it, but we got to do something special for this pre-Independence Day, especially considering the fact that Trump's making a big deal out of this. | ||
He's kicking off the festivities for America's 250th birthday. | ||
A quarter of a millennia. | ||
What a ride it's been. | ||
I'm going to have to download the Patrick Henry speech. | ||
I think we're going to have to watch the Patrick Henry speech during today's show. | ||
Give me liberty or give me death. | ||
And it'll be like looking in a dusty mirror. | ||
We'll see just innumerable similarities between the situation that our founding fathers were in in 1775 and where we're at now. | ||
We'll have to grab that. | ||
But we have a lot to talk about today. | ||
Of course, we'll be joined by Brianna Morello in the third hour. | ||
I hate to deliver this news, but we will not be joined by Professor Greg Locke today. | ||
We're scheduled to be joined by him today. | ||
But we're not going to anymore. | ||
So that's that. | ||
So that's that, I guess, which I was a little disappointed in. | ||
I know our audience was very excited to hear that conversation. | ||
I was excited to have it. | ||
Of course, you know, Alex Nolan obviously did a great job yesterday, but I think I'm a little bit further down the line than them. | ||
And maybe we'll talk about it anyway. | ||
Maybe we'll get into a few questions I have anyway that I would have loved to put to the pastor. | ||
Maybe he'd help me understand. | ||
Help me understand why as a Christian, we should be giving endless support to the murderous regime in Israel. | ||
I still have some questions, but so I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry to tell the audience that we will not be joined by Pastor Greg Locke. | ||
That wasn't my decision. | ||
I would have made a different decision. | ||
But we have lots to get into today, lots of videos to show you. | ||
And of course, Brianna Morello in the third hour to break down the Diddy trial as she was following the whole thing and has some very interesting insights. | ||
But let's begin today, as you do every day, with our daily dispatch. | ||
unidentified
|
*Bell rings* | |
All right, here to close to our daily dispatch for Thursday, the 3rd of July, 2025. | ||
Trump's mega bill advances in the House after GOP divisions nearly derail it. | ||
Early Thursday morning, the House voted 2019 to 2013 to advance Trump's $3.3 trillion bill, overcoming GOP divisions and near mutiny. | ||
Senate amendments to Medicaid, tax measures, and the debt limit prompted House GOP dissent as leadership and Trump exerted pressure to prevent blocking the rule vote. | ||
Records reveal four of the five GOP holdouts flipped support, enabling the House to pass the bill 219 to 213, the longest vote in history. | ||
The bill clears the procedural hurdle for a final House vote later Thursday, aiming for Trump's signature before July 4th. | ||
House legislation advances Trump's mega bill, raising the debt limit by $5 trillion and cutting $1.1 trillion from welfare programs, implying long-term fiscal shifts. | ||
And I'm happy about this, if for no other reason than it increases ICE's budget something like five times or more. | ||
I think it's going from $8 billion to $45 billion. | ||
So that's nice. | ||
So that's good to see. | ||
And hopefully we'll actually get some mass deportations out of it. | ||
Wouldn't that be nice? | ||
Meanwhile, DOJ considers criminal charges for state official over election integrity policies. | ||
The Justice Department is investigating whether to bring criminal charges against election officials for not safeguarding their computer systems, according to the New York Times. | ||
This inquiry is propelled by the Trump administration's unsubstantiated concerns about voter fraud, as reported by the Times. | ||
Unsubstantiated concerns about voter fraud. | ||
Well, I guess they need to do the investigation then. | ||
Yeah, kind of hard to have substantiated claims when you haven't done the investigation yet. | ||
But the New York Times says, don't do the investigation. | ||
The claims aren't substantiated. | ||
Yeah, that's what the investigation is for, New York Times. | ||
Thank you for your participation in this matter. | ||
Legal experts warn that criminalizing election processes poses a significant threat, as highlighted by Dax Goldstein from the state's United Democracy Center. | ||
Okay, Dax. | ||
I tell you what, Dax, I don't know who the hell you are or what Orwellian nonsense your deceptively named center is involved in, but I think you should shut up now forever. | ||
I don't know why that just made me so mad. | ||
Legal experts warn that criminalizing election processes poses a significant threat. | ||
You know what poses a significant threat to our democracy is having an utterly broken and totally insecure election system that anybody can vote however many times they want. | ||
Yeah, that's the real insecurity here. | ||
By the way, I think I figured out we haven't really gotten too much into it, but there was a story last week, earlier this week, about Chinese driver's licenses being part of some voter fraud scheme. | ||
And if you remember the time, I just was just like, I don't even get this. | ||
What are they even talking about? | ||
What even is this? | ||
Mail-in ballots. | ||
The whole problem with them is you didn't have to have an ID to vote. | ||
I mean, think about this, folks. | ||
Get a load of this. | ||
They send out ballots by the thousands to the wrong address, to just anywhere and everywhere. | ||
And anybody can pick one up, check off a box, and send it in, and they count that as a vote. | ||
Can you imagine? | ||
Can you imagine having a system like that to choose your national leadership? | ||
Can you imagine a more ridiculous concept? | ||
It's absurd. | ||
And it's the type of thing that you only do when you're a criminal. | ||
It's not a system that anybody who actually cared about having an election would ever have. | ||
You would only choose to have an election like that if you intended to screw the system and cheat. | ||
Because that's all that happened was they made it to where the votes could be anything and nobody could ever audit or figure it out. | ||
And here's the best part. | ||
Here's the twist. | ||
Let's say you find a bunch of envelopes full of ballots in a box in a ditch somewhere. | ||
You fill them out one by one. | ||
You vote for Joe Biden 100 times. | ||
You mail those in. | ||
They get collated. | ||
They get counted. | ||
The votes get registered in the machine. | ||
Then the person that you voted on the behalf of goes to the polling station, tries to vote themselves. | ||
You know what's going to happen? | ||
That vote gets thrown out and your vote gets counted instead. | ||
That's right. | ||
If there's some sort of clash, if there's some sort of misunderstanding, somebody shows up at a polling place And says, I haven't voted. | ||
I never sent in a mail-in ballot. | ||
I'm here to vote today. | ||
I'd like to vote, please. | ||
Then the voting place would just give them a fake ballot, let them fill it out, and then throw it away and count the one that was sent in, even though the person right there in person, in reality, said directly face-to-face to the election person, I did not vote by mail. | ||
That's not my ballot. | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
You count the one that was sent in. | ||
So I'm sorry, what was that? | ||
Dax? | ||
Sorry, Dax Goldstein? | ||
What were you saying about an insecure system, about something being dangerous? | ||
You want to run that by me again? | ||
The notion of widespread voter fraud is unsupported, and investigations could introduce new vulnerabilities, says the New York Times. | ||
New vulnerabilities. | ||
Folks, I'm thinking we need some sort of RICO case, and I think the New York Times needs to be criminally charged because they're acting extremely suspicious. | ||
So not only are they lying about the safety and security of the voting system overall, they then say, but if you look into it, actually, you're going to be causing more problems than otherwise. | ||
You're not allowed to investigate it. | ||
That could increase the vulnerabilities. | ||
Guys, investigating election integrity is destroying democracy. | ||
Okay. | ||
This is the New York Times equivalent of there being some crazy noise in your kid's room, and they jump out and slam the door behind them and go, nothing. | ||
What's going on there? | ||
Nothing. | ||
Nothing. | ||
What? | ||
What's going on where? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I didn't even think we had a hamster. | ||
You're like, well. | ||
Okay, if I wasn't suspicious before, your actions mean I basically have to investigate you now, and I'm going to lock you down in the meantime. | ||
So again, yeah, that's what we got there is the DOJ like, you know, we're going to look into this election integrity situation. | ||
It's very insecure. | ||
Our election has lots of vulnerabilities. | ||
We got vote machines connected to the internet. | ||
We got arbitrary mail-in ballot procedures with absolutely no guarantee that the chain of custody is adhered to. | ||
And the New York Times is just like, but you can't, but that's illegal. | ||
That's going to cause more problems. | ||
You're going to cause voter fraud if you do that. | ||
Don't look into it. | ||
Listen to Dax. | ||
Dax Goldstein will tell you. | ||
Okay. | ||
Our elections are rigged. | ||
I think the point I'm trying to make here is that do you realize that our elections were absolutely rigged in 2020 in a gigantic nationwide conspiracy to subvert our electoral process? | ||
And then when the people who voted for Donald Trump and know that the Democrats cheated actually go to protest it, you arrest them all and charge them with sedition and terrorism. | ||
Those Democrats are so clever, aren't they? | ||
These clever political games they play, cheating and then imprisoning you for pointing it out. | ||
They just love democracy so much. | ||
Meanwhile, Diddy, denied bail, will remain in jail until his sentencing. | ||
Judge, oh my God. | ||
All right, we'll try it. | ||
Judge Arun Sabramanian. | ||
Arun Arun Sabr Subramanian. | ||
Arun Subramanian. | ||
It's kind of a cool name, actually. | ||
Actually, I kind of like that name. | ||
Ordered Sean Diddy Combs to remain in custody as he prepares for sentencing on two other charges related to transporting individuals for prostitution. | ||
Combs was taken into custody in New York on September 16th, 2024, and has remained in federal detention at the Brooklyn Metropolitan Detention Center without the option for release since that date. | ||
After a seven-week trial beginning in May of this year, the jury found Combs not guilty on the most serious allegations involving organized criminal activity and sex trafficking, but convicted him on two lesser charges related to prostitution. | ||
And the whole thing is weird. | ||
We're going to talk to Brianna Morello about it in the third hour, of course, the prosecutor being Maureen Comey, the similarities between P. Diddy and things like Jeffrey Epstein, the number of high-profile celebrities and industry moguls that were a part of this just disgusting saga. | ||
It's all very interesting, and I don't think we're going to see the last of it. | ||
And it's also just another reminder that we're like Sodom. | ||
We're kind of like Sodom and Gomorrah. | ||
It's kind of a reminder of how similar we are to biblical metaphorical tales about God killing everyone out of sheer frustration. | ||
We're kind of like that. | ||
Okay. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Is that normal? | ||
It seems like every couple of months, there's some new story. | ||
I'm just thinking of the undercover video from either Project Veritas or James O'Keefe with the COVID czar in New York City just being on camera being like, yeah, we had orgies all the time. | ||
We had orgies in the office, orgies at home. | ||
It's like, is everybody having orgies? | ||
Is that actually a thing that's going on? | ||
Or is it just that upper echelon? | ||
It's the elite just being disgusting. | ||
And then, of course, only wanting to be around other disgusting people. | ||
And I guess it makes sense. | ||
I guess you start that trend going, that sort of feedback loop, and it's going to just get worse and worse because you think if P. Diddy hired a new assistant who was a sweet, innocent Christian girl Who just balked and was horrified when she was asked to, I don't know, I guess I don't want to speculate about what she would be asked to do. | ||
Asked to put on the pool floaties. | ||
Like, you don't, you know, they don't want anybody around. | ||
They don't want anybody like that around. | ||
They don't want anybody with morals and conviction around. | ||
They're disgusting. | ||
They're doing disgusting, sleazy, disgusting stuff. | ||
They don't want decent, upstanding, responsible, moral people around them. | ||
And you have that be the condition for a couple decades, and you end up where we're at now, basically. | ||
And then, you know, it's so bad that he gets arrested and kept in prison and comes to this gigantic scandal of all of these, sorry to keep using the words, disgusting horror stories. | ||
And then they basically let you off everything and slap on the wrist and back at it, I guess. | ||
I guess you can just get right back at it. | ||
Not that Diddy's life is going to change either way. | ||
I mean, when you learn what Diddy was up to, I don't know if federal prison is all that out of the ordinary for him. | ||
Maybe a little less baby oil, but other than that, generally the same types of activities. | ||
Meanwhile, at least 82 Palestinians killed in Gaza, including 38 people waiting for aid, authorities say. | ||
Airstrikes and shootings killed 94 Palestinians in Gaza overnight, including 45 who are attempting to get much-needed humanitarian aid, according to hospitals and the health ministry. | ||
Five people were killed while outside sites associated with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which is backed by Israel. | ||
At least 15 people died in airstrikes that hit tents in the Mawazi zone where displaced Palestinians are sheltering. | ||
More than 90% of Gaza's 2.3 million population has been displaced, contributing to a significant humanitarian crisis affecting hundreds of thousands. | ||
So, yeah, it's every day. | ||
No, it's every day. | ||
Again, we really do. | ||
We need like a little counter or something on the bottom of the screen. | ||
I'd say we need like a bell to ring every time a Palestinian dies, but then this wouldn't be the American Journal. | ||
It'd be the bell-ringing show where the endless sounds of bells ringing signals hell itself bubbling up to the surface. | ||
And finally, we have this House intern dies after Monday night shooting in Washington, D.C. Eric Tarpinian Jacob, a 21-year-old summer intern for Representative Ron Estes, was fatally shot Monday evening in the northwest area of Washington, D.C. Several individuals got out of a car near the corner of 7th and M Street and started shooting, with authorities believing that Tarpinian Jacob was not the intended victim. | ||
They found him unconscious with gunshot wounds, along with an adult female and 16-year-old male, all transported to local hospitals. | ||
Representative Estes expressed that he will fondly recall Tarpinian Jacob's warm nature and his habit of welcoming everyone who came into their office with a bright smile while the police are offering a $25,000 reward for information leading to an arrest. | ||
Oh, I have some information that could lead to an arrest. | ||
I have some information. | ||
Your dumbass mayor doesn't put people in prison, and you've got black teenagers who shoot people for fun on weeknights. | ||
So I don't know if you can use that information, but if the D.C. police are looking for a reason, some sort of cause, some sort of ultimate the buck stops here. | ||
Fault for a number of young upstanding professionals being randomly gunned down in Washington, D.C., I would look first at the policies that deliberately encourage that behavior. | ||
Then again, what do I know? | ||
What do I know? | ||
That, of course, is your daily dispatch brought to you by thealexjonestore.com. | ||
By the end of this weekend, the sale will be over. | ||
So this will be the last show you have before the end of the sale. | ||
It's the July 4th, 1776 super sale, the biggest sale in the history of the Alex Jones store. | ||
Buy one, get one free on just about every product, including all the supplements and all the apparel. | ||
A lot of the apparel is selling out and will not be reprinted possibly ever, certainly anytime soon. | ||
You get additional discounts on a number of products and, of course, extra savings if you are a VIP member of the Alex Jones VIP Club at theAlexJonesstore.com. | ||
Go to thealxjoneststore.com slash Harrison to let him know who sent you. | ||
The AlexJonesstore.com slash Harrison. | ||
In the next segment, we'll really get into it. | ||
You know, I have a on my computer monitor. | ||
I have a fortune from a fortune cookie. | ||
And you'd think that by seeing it every day, every morning, I would have had it memorized. | ||
But now that I think about it, I don't actually, I can't actually quote it. | ||
But it says something like, says something like, compassion wins more hearts than condemnation. | ||
Essentially, you win more flies with honey than vinegar. | ||
But I've never liked that saying because I don't like flies. | ||
I'm not trying to maximize the number of flies. | ||
But I think about that a lot. | ||
Because I condemn quite a bit. | ||
Because I get up here and I condemn away. | ||
I just condemn and condemn and condemn because it's also condemnable. | ||
Matches went and looked. | ||
It really is. | ||
What does it shredded it? | ||
What does it say? | ||
Double-sided sticky tape. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I thought I needed the reminder. | ||
Because I'm not trying to catch flies here. | ||
I'm trying to win hearts and minds. | ||
And apparently people don't respond Well, to be calling stupid, even if they're super stupid. | ||
In fact, the more stupid they are, the less they like being called stupid, I found. | ||
But all this to say, I gotta, I can't, I can't help it. | ||
I'm in the next segment, we'll get into it. | ||
But you look around the world, it seems convoluted, it seems complicated, it seems like we've got all of these interconnecting networks of manipulation and corruption and like all this sort of stuff. | ||
And you think if only there was a simple answer, if only there was an easy, simple, one-size-fits-all solution to these intractable problems that we find ourselves with, or at least an underlying cause that we could identify and counteract. | ||
And I think in a very simple and basic way, it is just stupidity, not general stupidity, a particular brand, a particular streak of leftist stupidity that I've got a couple examples of this morning that is beyond explanation. | ||
There's something metaphysical, practically magical going on here with this level of disconnection from reality, stupidity, and it's destroying us all. | ||
We'll get to it. | ||
It's not my design to come up here and just call half the country stupid. | ||
Well, it's actually more than half. | ||
But that's not the point I'm trying to make here. | ||
But I'll show you some videos. | ||
I'll read you some articles. | ||
You tell me. | ||
You tell me what's happening here. | ||
You tell me if there's something going on other than... | ||
Thank you. | ||
It's not stupidity. | ||
It's delusion. | ||
Not sure if that's any better. | ||
But The Atlantic. | ||
The Atlantic magazine has come out with a article about 10 or 20 years overdue. | ||
The liberal misinformation bubble about youth gender medicine. | ||
How the left ended up disbelieving the science. | ||
Yeah, it turns out transgenderism isn't a real thing. | ||
It's not a thing. | ||
Hey guys, it turns out men are men and women are women. | ||
And can you believe, did you know that chopping a little girl's breasts off because she's going through an awkward phase in middle school is not actually a medical procedure that has any positive outcomes? | ||
Can you believe it? | ||
I think there are times in America where there is a genuine disagreement. | ||
There's genuine misunderstanding, complicated data that you could view through different lenses and come to different conclusions. | ||
This is not one of those times. | ||
This is a bunch of people saying the sky is red and threatening to kill themselves if you disagree. | ||
And everybody else being too cowardly to disagree. | ||
This isn't a matter of trusting the science or not. | ||
It's a matter of are you a human being with the brain that can think thoughts? | ||
Are you capable of applying elementary logic and observing the world around you? | ||
Is it anything other than stupidity? | ||
That's the question I'm asking. | ||
And it's, you know, Harding Moons just wants to joke about this because the left is realizing that everything they believe is wrong. | ||
I mean, can you imagine having to go through this? | ||
I mean, just what is it like? | ||
Honestly, what is it like to be a liberal? | ||
It almost scares me to try to put myself in the mindset of the type of person who just routinely, routinely, like it is a routine. | ||
It is a yearly tradition to them to be so like aggressively dedicated to an idea where you're like cutting your family members off and mutilating yourself and your body. | ||
And you're just like an extremist in this idea that is just proven utterly wrong two years later. | ||
And they do it again and again and again. | ||
How many people had screaming matches with their families because they thought Trump was a Russian agent? | ||
unidentified
|
Probably people still believe that. | |
How many people cut their family members off because COVID and masks and they didn't get the vaccine? | ||
Or because they said that COVID came from a lab leak? | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Or that ending, you know, defunding the police and the Black Lives Matter crap they came up with. | ||
It is literally a yearly tradition for liberals to have one of their foundational, central pillars of their belief system just utterly eviscerated and proven incontrovertibly to be absolutely false in every possible way. | ||
What is that like? | ||
Honestly, what is how how do you I don't get it. | ||
Like, I don't get it. | ||
How do they function? | ||
And then, because the amazing thing is the next dumbass lie that gets put in front of them, they just buy hook line and sinker. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
It's crazy, folks. | |
What is that like? | ||
What would that be like? | ||
Because I'll tell you, there have been times in my life with like Trayvon Martin. | ||
When Trayvon Martin was happening, and I was like in high school, and all I knew about it was like a segment on the daily show. | ||
And I was also convinced, this is a white guy just shot a black guy in the chest. | ||
I'm like yelling at my parents. | ||
We're like arguing about it. | ||
And then later, I actually looked into it. | ||
I didn't take Jon Stewart's words for it. | ||
Looked into it and was like, oh, crap. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
I look like an idiot. | ||
That sucks. | ||
I don't want to feel that feeling again. | ||
I better A, not listen to Jon Stewart anymore. | ||
B, look into this stuff. | ||
C, apologize to my parents for making a scene at Ninfa's Mexican restaurant in Houston. | ||
This is a real story, I'm telling you. | ||
So, you know, I have some experience in it. | ||
This was 20 years ago. | ||
Granted, I was a dumb kid. | ||
Still haunts me to this day. | ||
So I really am struggling to understand how you do it year after year after year, month after month after month. | ||
How do you persist? | ||
What is that like? | ||
I mean, I would think that every time one of these, again, foundational beliefs, because it's not like, you know, these are leftists. | ||
It's not like this is just something they think, but it doesn't really matter, right? | ||
Like you can be wrong about stuff because you just haven't looked into it, but it's like, oh, okay, that's the case. | ||
Oh, well, I didn't know, right? | ||
You're just going, well, I thought, didn't Trump do some deal with, you know, Saudi Arabia or something? | ||
And people are like, no. | ||
You're like, oh, okay, I thought that was the case. | ||
This isn't just casual. | ||
These people define themselves by this stuff. | ||
They like attack cops, throwing bricks at federal agents and going to jail over these beliefs. | ||
They are literally mutilating themselves over these beliefs. | ||
They are like live in this persistent condition of seething anger over these things. | ||
So this isn't just like, oh, you know, I thought this actor played that character. | ||
No, it was that one. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
This isn't just like trivia or just like something happening. | ||
This would be like every year, you know, some evidence comes out that just utterly disproves Christianity, right? | ||
Because this is like their religion. | ||
They become religiously dedicated to these ideas. | ||
And then like three years later, all the people that told them the idea in the first place all have to come out and write articles going, ah, gee, it looked like cutting your son's dick off wasn't such a great idea after all. | ||
Whoops are bad. | ||
They're just like, what? | ||
But I thought for sure, Trent, that's really upsetting. | ||
I'm really bummed to hear that that was all a lie, but at least we still have climate change. | ||
At least that's still real, right? | ||
I've been obsessed with and condescending to my conservative family members about COVID and about the vaccine and about Trumping Russia collusion, about the Ukraine war, and I'm just an insufferable dick about all of this, and I'm wrong about all of it, but at least we still have climate change, right? | ||
At least that's something to believe in. | ||
Is it something other than stupidity? | ||
Again, is my question. | ||
This is the first sentence of the article. | ||
I haven't even gotten to the article yet, but it's about to get a lot worse. | ||
Allow children to transition or they will kill themselves. | ||
For more than a decade, this has been the strongest argument in favor of youth gender medicine, a scenario so awful that it stifled any doubts or questions about puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones. | ||
We often ask parents, would you rather have a dead son or a live daughter? | ||
Johanna Olson Kennedy of Children's Hospital Los Angeles once explained to ABC News. | ||
Variations on the phase crop up in innumerable media articles and public statements by influencers, activists, and LGBTQ groups. | ||
The same idea that choice is transition or death appeared in the arguments made by Elizabeth Preliger, the Biden administration's solicitor general before the Supreme Court last year. | ||
Tennessee's law prohibiting the use of puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones to treat minors with gender dysphoria would, she says, increase the risk of suicide. | ||
But there's a huge problem with this emotive formulation. | ||
It isn't true. | ||
It isn't true. | ||
So, you know, the problem with stupidity is there's nothing I can do about it. | ||
There's nothing I can say that would enlighten people who would fall for this. | ||
Do you know what I mean? | ||
Allow children to transition or they'll kill themselves. | ||
This is the exhausting part is that we have been making these arguments for 10 years. | ||
10 years we've been making these arguments. | ||
And they have been prima facie, self-evident from the very beginning that we are right. | ||
And these people aren't just wrong. | ||
They're evil. | ||
They're evil. | ||
Nobody saying castrate your kid or they'll kill themselves actually believes that. | ||
I mean, we've taken the most toxic bipolar disorder girlfriend's bad habits and made it a matter of medical policy. | ||
Do it or I'll kill myself. | ||
That is the argument they had. | ||
Of course, but we know, and study after study shows: not only is it not true, but it's inverted. | ||
It's an inversion. | ||
You are more likely to kill yourself if you medically transition. | ||
You are significantly more likely to commit suicide after you medically transition. | ||
Kind of like how you're more likely to get COVID after you get the vaccine. | ||
Kind of like we're more in danger now after we target Iran with strikes. | ||
Almost like everything that we do not only does not solve the problem, makes everything worse. | ||
Is there something other than stupidity that explains this? | ||
I have to know. | ||
Now being serious for a second, there is empathy that you can have for the parents in this because there's a difference between stupidity and ignorance. | ||
And a lot of these parents aren't stupid, but they are ignorant to what's going on. | ||
We are not ignorant, so it looks like stupidity for us. | ||
But in order to understand the true magnitude of what we're talking about here and the true depth of evil that we're talking about, what's rare? | ||
When Justice Lito claimed the ACLU lawyer chased Strangio on such claims during oral arguments, his name was Strangio. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Okay. | ||
Strange, was that his drag stage name? | ||
Strangio made a startling admission. | ||
He conceded there's no evidence to support the idea that medical transition reduces adolescent suicide rates. | ||
No, it increases them. | ||
No, it massively increases the risk because here's the little secret about transgenderism that is obvious to everybody who thinks about it for a single second. | ||
The majority of children are not born in the wrong body. | ||
In fact, nobody has ever in the history of the world been born in the wrong body. | ||
That's an absurd statement. | ||
It's an absurd sentence. | ||
It's an absurd series of words that shouldn't even go together. | ||
That's never happened. | ||
The little secret is it's a phase people are going through where they're experiencing discomfort. | ||
Their bodies are changing because of puberty. | ||
The social dynamic is shifting as they move from childhood into young adulthood and they feel discomfort. | ||
And then they've got nurses and teachers seducing them into a gay lifestyle, telling them that it's actually their body being wrong that's the cause of all of their discomfort. | ||
And if they just mutilate themselves, everything will be solved. | ||
That's a lie. | ||
It's a lie from the beginning. | ||
It's exploitation for young people going through the most difficult part in their lives so far. | ||
And it doesn't solve any problems. | ||
And it never would. | ||
And it's ridiculous to think that it would. | ||
And so all that you've done is taken somebody's temporary discomfort as a middle schooler in America and crippled them for life because of it. | ||
They've made it that they will never experience physical love ever in their lives. | ||
And then, yeah, they say gender is a social construct. | ||
Gender is a social construct. | ||
We're going to lop your tits off. | ||
So here's the part about ignorance and stupidity because you have to understand the true depths of evil that we're talking about here. | ||
For the average person, and it's worth reminding you, we are on the farthest end of the information spectrum at Infowars. | ||
And if you're listening to me right now, you are genuinely more informed than 99.9% of people on earth. | ||
If you know who Klaus Schwab is, Bill Maher has hosted a political television show, one of the most popular programs in the country, for over 20 years. | ||
He'd never heard of Klaus Schwab or the World Economic Forum. | ||
An expert whose entire life, career, and identity revolves around politics, geopolitics, and understanding our democratic system. | ||
He'd never heard of Klaus Schwab, never heard of the World Economic Forum. | ||
You think your next-door neighbor has? | ||
Probably because, to be honest, more people listen to Infowars than Bill Maher. | ||
So, you know, unless they're listening to Infowars, unless they're seeking this information out, the vast majority of American people have no idea what's going on. | ||
They'ren't even close. | ||
Okay? | ||
And so when you're one of these people, when you're a normie and you've got encyclopedic knowledge of the Texans' starting roster, but have no idea what is being taught in your children's school. | ||
And one day your kid comes home and says, Ma, I don't want to be called a girl. | ||
I want to change my name. | ||
I want a boy's name. | ||
You go, okay, well, that's whatever. | ||
You know, you want to be a dinosaur last week. | ||
Fine, we'll call you a boy's name. | ||
But then, like, it keeps persisting. | ||
Then they want to get their hair cut short. | ||
And, of course, you're a dumbass American ignoramus. | ||
You don't know anything about anything. | ||
And you're just like, this is weird. | ||
This is weird. | ||
I guess it's a phase. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Is this something I should be concerned about? | ||
I'm not really worried about it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Has Bill Maher really never heard of MKUltra, Klaus Schwab, or the WEF? | ||
Yeah, no, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
No, he's the one that will condescend to you. | ||
New rule, I'm a moron. | ||
They just don't know anything. | ||
They're just the stupidest people. | ||
Again, I'm trying, you know. | ||
Is there something other? | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm trying not to repeat myself, but these people. | ||
And we'll make it funny here in a second, but long story short, you've got these people whose kids come home from kindergarten, and they don't know that the teachers have indoctrinated into this. | ||
They don't know they're being shown pornographic books that convince them of this. | ||
They don't know that they're having trouble fitting in. | ||
And suddenly, when they say they're gay, everybody loves them and is celebrating them. | ||
And we want you to hang out over here. | ||
No, we want you to play with us over here. | ||
And there's social pressures that are encouraged and fostered by the authorities that are keeping them back at recess to educate them on the feelings that they're feeling. | ||
They have no idea about any of that. | ||
All they see is their kid is like, I'm, you know, whatever. | ||
I'm gender transitioning. | ||
And so the parent goes, this is kind of weird. | ||
I think this is kind of weird. | ||
I better go ask somebody who knows about this. | ||
I'm just a stupid American. | ||
All I do is watch Netflix. | ||
I can't be held responsible for my children's lives. | ||
And they go to the authorities and the authorities go, well, you know, this is a very sensitive topic. | ||
We want to take it very seriously. | ||
And the last thing you want to do is start questioning this or, you know, getting mad that your kid is like this. | ||
The best thing to do is accept it and adopt it. | ||
And, you know, really, the faster we can get them on hormones, the better it'll be. | ||
And these, I don't even want to condemn them because they are stupid, they are ignorant, but they're also complete victims. | ||
Because that's the point I'm making here is that the people in the positions of authority are using this ignorance as a vulnerability to destroy children. | ||
And they're going to the parents and going, look, this is tough. | ||
We've looked at the stats. | ||
And if you don't go along with this, your kid's going to kill themselves. | ||
And a parent hears that and like, I mean, what wouldn't you do? | ||
What absurdity would you not go to when you're told the alternative is your child committing suicide? | ||
Do you understand how evil that is? | ||
Do you understand how utterly sickeningly evil it is? | ||
Like, almost even if it was like true, like even just to use that as a bargaining chip, as a lever of manipulation is just so wrong in so many different ways. | ||
You know, preying on the ignorance and emotion of parents and telling them, well, you know, one day you're going to be wondering where little Jimmy is. | ||
And you're going to hear the bathwater spilling out of the bathtub. | ||
And you're going to realize he slid his wrist in the tub because you didn't let him transition. | ||
It's like, imagine telling a parent that. | ||
That was like the official strategy for dealing with transgenderism. | ||
It's like, even if that was the case, it's evil to do. | ||
But we know and absolutely no one's, and it's like, okay, it's obvious if you just think about it. | ||
Then they do the studies and it just confirms what we've always known. | ||
Then they do the long-term studies and it showed that it's not just a temporary thing. | ||
It is in fact forever. | ||
And then there's the number of side effects where it's like, again, even if it was like, if they don't get it, they kill themselves. | ||
And, you know, the yeah, yeah, that's the real thing is if you let them transition, they'll kill all the kids at the Christian school. | ||
There's one huge problem with this emotive formulation. | ||
It isn't true. | ||
Well, that's the, that is the huge problem at the center of it all, but that's far from the only problem. | ||
You know, there are other problems. | ||
It's not just that it's not true that children won't kill themselves. | ||
They become more likely to kill themselves and they're disfigured for life and they have to experience painful medical procedures on a weekly basis that I don't even want to describe. | ||
And there's all sorts of just disgusting complications where they're removing pieces of the intestines to create the genitals that get sepsis and infected. | ||
And it's guaranteed that they'll never experience sexual pleasure in their lives. | ||
And they'll obviously never be able to procreate and become a genetic dead end. | ||
And they'll be socially ostracized. | ||
And just in general, they'll be mentally incapacitated. | ||
And the medications that they're put on have a number of horrifying side effects. | ||
And they can never get off them. | ||
Once they get on them, they'll be lifelong medical patients out of this elective procedure. | ||
So I guess you could say there's a lot of problems with transgenderism, not just the fact that it's all entirely predicated on lies. | ||
Because in that, in and of itself, you've got the fact that these lies are being perpetuated by the authorities that are, you know, giving over the authority to and obligation to protect these children. | ||
We're going to move on. | ||
I didn't mean to spend the whole segment on that one story, but there's no vindication here. | ||
There's no celebration. | ||
There's no, haha, we told you we were right. | ||
There's just a infinite sadness that you ever believed these lives in the first place. | ||
The confusion that you were ever so deceived. | ||
Covering topic, we're plumbing the depths. | ||
We're exploring the endlessly complicated and unimaginably deep cave system of liberal stupidity. | ||
We have not yet found the bottom. | ||
But we're spelunking along. | ||
Let's go to clip number five here. | ||
Got two videos that really, really exemplify this. | ||
Clip number five, a hero woman stops a duck being raped at the park. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch. | |
for our radio listeners, we got a woman. | ||
We turned down the audio a little. | ||
We got a woman standing next to a lake yelling at ducks. | ||
She's yelling at ducks. | ||
Here's the thing the lady doesn't understand. | ||
Get us a net. | ||
She's like, a duck's being attacked. | ||
She thinks a duck is attacking. | ||
Bring the audio down, guys. | ||
She thinks the ducks are attacking each other. | ||
That's just how ducks have sex. | ||
That's just how procreation works in the animal world. | ||
So now she's in the water stopping the copulation, preventing more ducks from being born because she's just that stupid. | ||
This is the liberal mindset is, oh my God, I have to save that poor duck and then does the thing that stops there from being ducks ever again if she were to succeed. | ||
I mean, doesn't everybody know this? | ||
Or do I have a warped sense of internet trivia? | ||
Ducks' penises are corkscrew-shaped because there was like a feedback loop of evolutionary changes in ducks where it became more difficult to, I don't know where the crew's getting these pictures. | ||
You ever seen, you ever heard cats in an alley at night? | ||
It doesn't sound fun, but it's how they create new cats. | ||
It is the creation of life. | ||
It is the process by which ducks exist in the first place. | ||
And this woman is stopping that from happening because she thinks one duck is attacking another. | ||
This is liberalism. | ||
This is why they laugh at Alex Jones for saying they're putting chemicals in the water that makes the frogs gay. | ||
They think it's fine if frogs are gay because they don't seem to understand that you need to be straight to procreate. | ||
The ducks rape each other. | ||
It's just how it works. | ||
The suicidal stupidity of the left on full display. | ||
I don't know what else to call it when you can't tell that chopping off a kid's wiener is not going to get him out of depression or that animals having sexy shit with each other isn't romantic. | ||
Yeah, I don't know what else to explain. | ||
I don't know how to explain it to these people. | ||
They're going to end life on earth if they had their way. | ||
Let's go down to clip number three. | ||
Here's another liberal woman very concerned about something that she just cannot understand and doesn't have the humility to recognize she doesn't understand. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
On the wall that I feel is a little, I'm not going to fully zoom out yet, but let's just take a look. | |
We have some people playing golf. | ||
We had looks, you can tell by the clothes that they're wearing about what year or time period it takes place in. | ||
We have a lady playing golf. | ||
She's not holding a golf club. | ||
This lady's playing golf. | ||
She's holding a golf club. | ||
This is like a man's, probably one of their husbands or something like that playing golf. | ||
Um um this does not appear to be the child of any of those people. | ||
This kid looks pretty young. | ||
This kid looks pretty young. | ||
Let's get a height comparison. | ||
I know they're not at the same level, but like something about this is really wrong. | ||
Something about this feels really wrong. | ||
Like holding all the clubs, not playing golf. | ||
Looks like a really young kid. | ||
A really young kid. | ||
This has she never heard of a cat. | ||
unidentified
|
This does not feel like a picture we should have on display. | |
And this does not feel like some actions we should be proud of. | ||
Let's pull it out. | ||
So she's she thinks it's racist. | ||
Well, she's shocked at a black person having a job, I think, is what the real emotion there is. | ||
But can you just see her going and just like ripping the kid away? | ||
The kid's like, ma'am, I need a job. | ||
What are you doing? | ||
unidentified
|
All right, welcome back, folks. | |
All right. | ||
I'm telling you. | ||
unidentified
|
There's something wrong with these people. | |
The last video that we made, I guess, messed up a little bit. | ||
I'm not sure. | ||
Something happened in the encoding of it, but it's just especially funny because the woman filming that, she's like, I work at a golf course and I just saw a very disturbing picture. | ||
I think this is racist. | ||
And she shows a picture from like the early 1900s, three white people golfing and their young black caddy. | ||
And so, you know, part of it is like, wait, you work at a golf course, you don't know what a caddy is? | ||
She literally is like, wait, but he's carrying the clubs, but he's not playing? | ||
You work at a golf course and you don't know about caddies. | ||
Okay, how is that possible? | ||
unidentified
|
How is that possible? | |
And she's outraged at this kid having a job. | ||
Again, you know, you just, it's like if liberals get their way, it's like they think they're stopping a duck from being raped. | ||
And if you stopped every duck from being raped, there'd be no more. | ||
It'd be the last generation of ducks. | ||
Duck three way on screen, thank you. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
And this lady, you know, it's just there's something, it's something about the liberal mindset that it's like emblematic about it. | ||
Like if this woman could go back in time, she'd be like, I'm rescuing the little black boy. | ||
Come with me, black boy. | ||
I'll save you. | ||
Black kid's probably like, lady, I get paid a quarter a day for this. | ||
This is awesome. | ||
Well, yeah, so you can't wait. | ||
Matt's having a switch today, and he's saying stuff in my ear. | ||
You should just be saying it on air. | ||
Can we just say that on air? | ||
I mean, what does she think? | ||
He just said they're going to sacrifice the boy after they sink the putt. | ||
What does this woman think is happening? | ||
What does this woman think is happening? | ||
That's my bet. | ||
They're totally sacrificing that kid. | ||
Can you see the white people debating? | ||
unidentified
|
Saying, oh, if I make this putt, I'm going to sacrifice. | |
That kid's going in the crock pot. | ||
Yeah, yeah, they're going to eat him afterwards. | ||
That's why she's so concerned. | ||
Sorry, that's the golf course at Bohemian Grove. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
I mean, but can you imagine it's like this kid? | ||
This kid. | ||
Do you think he's a slave? | ||
Does this woman think he's a slave? | ||
Does she think that this is pre-Civil War golf course and that this poor child will be whipped if he doesn't provide the nine iron correctly? | ||
I mean, young Tiger Woods. | ||
Legend of Bagger Bands. | ||
No, but this is it, right? | ||
It's like this lady is like, she thinks she sees victimization. | ||
She feels misplaced maternal instinct and wanting to protect the young black child. | ||
He doesn't look like he's their kids. | ||
What is he doing there? | ||
Why is he holding their clubs? | ||
What's happening? | ||
Like reeks of like a desperate cry for attention or virtue signaling, right? | ||
But it's not even a cry for attention, virtue signaling. | ||
It's a complete misunderstanding of the entire situation. | ||
I guarantee you go to that kid. | ||
I'm here to rescue you. | ||
I'm here to rescue you, Sambo. | ||
Come with me. | ||
And the kid's like, lady, I get paid for this. | ||
I'm spending all day on a golf course. | ||
You want to send me back to the slums where I can't make crap? | ||
No, this is a good job. | ||
I'm getting exercise. | ||
They give me tips. | ||
These people are lovely. | ||
I'm learning golf. | ||
If I stick with this, I'll be managing the food cart next year and I'll be making a salary. | ||
Like this is, it's, but it's like liberal. | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
Something about their mindset. | ||
They see good things and they think they're bad things. | ||
They have such an utterly warped view of reality. | ||
Like if they got what they wanted, everything would die. | ||
Everything would collapse. | ||
Everything would be destroyed. | ||
It'd be awful. | ||
Here's this little, here's this kid. | ||
He's probably 12 years old or something. | ||
He looks about 12 in that video. | ||
He's got a job. | ||
He's learning the business. | ||
He's building his resume. | ||
He's getting a good start. | ||
He's earning his own money. | ||
He's seeing how the upper class lives. | ||
He's getting introduced to the finer things in life. | ||
And he's making money and working an honest job. | ||
And this woman is like, oh my God, I must save him from this. | ||
I must save the duck from being raped. | ||
I must save the black child from having a job and building his life. | ||
Creating a foundation for success. | ||
How else will he get on welfare? | ||
Right. | ||
You should be, this little boy should be at home listening to rap music and smoking weed. | ||
That's when we know he's really free. | ||
Can we just watch this video again? | ||
Because we didn't have time to watch the whole thing. | ||
I just want to savor this. | ||
I want to indulge in this stupidity for a moment just so we can watch it again. | ||
And I don't know what happened with the video, but I saw we were playing the beginning. | ||
I want to see the beginning if we can because there's just something hilarious about a woman that works at a golf course not knowing what a caddy... | ||
Maybe this is like a series of things because this is actually a very funny idea now that I think about it. | ||
Now that I think about it, here's what you do. | ||
You find any picture with a black person in it and you start asking about why it's so racist and how it got to be this way and now you have to rescue them. | ||
Like when she, you know, if she sees a restaurant with a black cook, does she start crying? | ||
Does she force her way into the kitchen? | ||
You don't have to do this, sir, serving all these white people. | ||
Where did they catch you? | ||
We can send you home. | ||
She's just like, what, lady? | ||
I've worked here for 20 years. | ||
I got my picture on the wall. | ||
I'm employee of the month. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
I mean, is it really? | ||
Is that it? | ||
Is she so unfamiliar with the sight of black people working that she is like thinks it's a slavery? | ||
It's ready. | ||
All right, let's watch this video again. | ||
unidentified
|
I work at a golf course. | |
Please help me interpret this picture on the wall that I feel is a little. | ||
I'm not going to fully zoom out yet, but let's just take a look. | ||
We have some people playing golf. | ||
You can tell by the clothes that they're wearing about what year or time period it takes place in. | ||
We have a lady playing golf. | ||
She's not holding a golf club. | ||
This lady's playing golf. | ||
She's holding a golf club. | ||
This is like a man. | ||
It's probably one of their husbands or something like that playing golf. | ||
Oh my God, a caddy. | ||
This does not appear to be the child of any of those people. | ||
Come on, why not? | ||
Well, wait, let's close it right there. | ||
Posit right there. | ||
What do you mean this kid doesn't look like he's the child of any of these people? | ||
What the hell is that supposed to mean, lady? | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
Do you not know race is a social construct? | ||
What do you mean the black kid is not the child of the white adults? | ||
You want to talk about something sounding a little racist. | ||
Sound a little bit like a dog whistle. | ||
You're telling me that you don't believe a black child can have white parents. | ||
I didn't realize you were a fascist, racist, white supremacist. | ||
What do we do? | ||
What do we do, folks? | ||
All right, let's go back to the video. | ||
We'll finish out here. | ||
I want to hear what else she thinks is happening. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's get a height comparison. | |
I know they're not at the same level, but like something about this feels really wrong. | ||
Something about this feels really wrong. | ||
Like, this woman's just awful. | ||
unidentified
|
She's great. | |
Looks like a really young kid. | ||
A really young kid. | ||
Not that young. | ||
He's like, over 13. | ||
unidentified
|
This does not feel like a picture we should have on display. | |
And this does not feel like some actions we should be proud of. | ||
let alone have it framed. | ||
Am I I see the picture. | ||
And it feels like this. | ||
Overthinking is not what you're doing. | ||
unidentified
|
Take it down or something. | |
Because, like, this is a kid, right? | ||
This is a little kid. | ||
like multiple golf club bags so it's like She's going to like tear the picture down. | ||
All right. | ||
All right. | ||
What comments? | ||
I mean, look, even what do the comments say? | ||
It's racist for a black person to have a job. | ||
This picture reminds me of how people don't realize this is where tip culture started after slavery was abolished before integration. | ||
Oh my God, tipping is racist. | ||
That's an excuse black people say. | ||
So they tried to get a paper. | ||
I'm using that. | ||
I'm taking that to the bank. | ||
I'm sorry, waitress. | ||
I would tip, but I'm not a racist. | ||
You know, a caddy gets paid. | ||
It's a job, right? | ||
It's racist to give a young man a job. | ||
The kid's being paid. | ||
Golf didn't exist in the U.S. during slavery. | ||
History, people, it was an important class. | ||
How is this racist? | ||
The masters in Augusto required black caddies until 1982. | ||
Yeah, golf has a history of racism. | ||
Hold on. | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
You're required to employ black people because you're racist? | ||
Run that one by me again. | ||
You're required to have a black caddy because they're racist. | ||
Classic racist maneuver of compelling black participation. | ||
Typical, typical racist move employing black people. | ||
As it turns out, she works at a golf course, but happens to be a marketing genius. | ||
Just mining outrage. | ||
You know, she should have said which golf course it is. | ||
It's getting a lot of attention. | ||
Can't pay for this type of exposure. | ||
Labor laws barely existed back then. | ||
Yeah, it was cool. | ||
So children could work and they loved it. | ||
Gaff Caddy was actually a common job for black children at the time due to it being a low-skilled job with low pay and max for maximum work. | ||
Kids were like eight years old working when they should have been in school. | ||
It definitely morally wrong that they have this picture on display. | ||
It's morally wrong. | ||
You see, this is all really just an aspect of demonizing white people and history and basically saying that your history is anathema. | ||
Your reality of the way things used to be is offensive to the liberals, so it must be destroyed. | ||
We must eradicate any memory of the way things once were because it's repulsive to the utterly retarded morals of the stupid ignoramuses who somebody told was intelligent. | ||
Again, that's the deal here. | ||
In reality, I don't have a problem with stupid people. | ||
I have a problem with stupid people who aren't humble. | ||
That's what we're plagued with, is stupid people who refuse to acknowledge their own stupidity, even when it's pointed out to them, even when they get the same thing wrong over and over and over again, when they fall for the same lie a dozen times, and then they'll still condescend to you. | ||
Sweetie, it's called climate change, okay? | ||
Take your vaccine. | ||
It's called climate change. | ||
I'm off to rescue black people from working and ducks from procreating and frogs from existing ever again. | ||
So, we'll move on. | ||
We will move on now. | ||
Folks, this is what we're fighting against. | ||
This is what we're up against, folks. | ||
This is what we're up against. | ||
It's like that classic meme of the Wojack asking our Lord Jesus Christ, why do you give me your toughest battles? | ||
And Jesus Christ responds from on high. | ||
Son, your enemies are the stupidest, fattest, most retarded human beings that have ever existed on this planet. | ||
It could not be easier for you. | ||
You ain't up against the Mongols. | ||
You're not up against the Romans. | ||
You're not up against sophisticated, diabolical actors. | ||
You are simply inundated with mental retards with too much confidence. | ||
God help us. | ||
God help us. | ||
And I hope you help us as well. | ||
I hope that you go to thealxjonesstore.com to make sure that InfoWars is here to just inject simplicity and normalcy and obvious truths into this endless roiling landscape of retardation. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I really shouldn't be this kind of, but it's like, come on, y'all. | ||
It's one thing if you're just dumb and like it doesn't matter. | ||
But like, these lies are killing us. | ||
These lies are destroying our country. | ||
These lies are ruining lives. | ||
And the stupid people are breeding and they're infecting each other. | ||
And one stupid person says a stupid thing and another stupid person thinks it's smart and says it as well. | ||
And suddenly you've got Neil deGrasse Tyson on Joe Rogan. | ||
What are we doing here, folks? | ||
I hope you can support us in this anti-stupidity movement. | ||
This anti-stupidity movement. | ||
And look, we can try to tell you, we can try to inform you. | ||
At the end of the day, this may be a chemical problem that require chemical solutions. | ||
They might be missing core components of their brain. | ||
They might be missing out on the vitamins and minerals and supplementation necessary. | ||
Maybe that's the solution. | ||
Maybe the solution has been in front of us the whole time. | ||
It's Optimal Human from theAlexJonesStore.com. | ||
It's ultramethylene blue and Irish Seamos and Chilajit Gummies from InfowarsStore.com. | ||
If we could only get these products into the hands of the liberals, then they could stop being so stupid and they could stop destroying everything with their stupidity. | ||
It's up to you folks. | ||
Go now to thealxjonesstore.com slash Harrison. | ||
Get yourself some supplementations. | ||
Get yourself a t-shirt that in and of itself can help to spread awareness about this plague, this plague of stupidity that we're experiencing. | ||
Get optimal human superfood greens. | ||
Sneak it into your husband's smoothie. | ||
Just kidding. | ||
Don't sneak it into anybody. | ||
Don't do that. | ||
Just kidding. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
It's not fluoride, Harrison. | ||
No, yeah, it's not fluoride. | ||
You actually don't have to sneak it in. | ||
You don't have to sneak it in. | ||
It's not fluoride or atrazine. | ||
You're not dosing anybody. | ||
You dose yourself. | ||
We want you to dose yourself with Optimal Human. | ||
Break out of the stupidity matrix and join us here in the light. | ||
You know what it's like. | ||
You know what it's like. | ||
It's like Plato's cave. | ||
And it's like we escape and we see the sunlight. | ||
And it's painful, but our eyes adjust. | ||
We realize not only is there more to the world than the shadows on the wall, but that the shadows on the wall are being controlled and manipulated and keeping us in a state of delusion. | ||
And so we go back into the cave and we brave the darkness and we break the chains and we pull people out into the sunlight and they resist at first, but eventually they give in and accept that this is reality. | ||
And then they crawl back into the cave and just keep watching the shadows. | ||
And we're like, no, but the real world. | ||
And they're like, shh, shh, the shadows are on. | ||
Hold on, quiet. | ||
I'm getting my stories. | ||
The shadows are talking to me. | ||
It's like, but you know, that's fake, right? | ||
You know, I mean, I showed you the people. | ||
I showed you the people doing the shadow puppets, right? | ||
You know, it's fake now. | ||
You know there's a real world. | ||
You know that you're being lied to. | ||
And by that point, they've stopped listening and they're watching the shadow on the wall and you're talking to nobody. | ||
That's sort of what it's like. | ||
It's like we've escaped. | ||
We've escaped the cave. | ||
We've gone back in, told everybody what's happening, and they're just literally too stupid to even understand. | ||
They're literally too stupid to comprehend the very simple things that we're trying to tell them. | ||
It's very upsetting. | ||
I, for one, am very upset. | ||
I guess let's just keep talking about how stupid the Dems are. | ||
Let's go to clip number six here. | ||
This is Democrat strategist James Carville. | ||
He's predicting more just hysterical nonsense about Trump. | ||
Let's see what they have next. | ||
People tell you they're worried about the midterms, and you say you should be because there's a good chance that Trump will try to pull something. | ||
What do you think is going to happen? | ||
Well, I don't know. | ||
What I think is going to happen is Virginia and New Jersey are going to be Democratic blowouts. | ||
And I think he's going to read the election. | ||
By the way, there are more people that live in Virginia and New Jersey than live in New York City. | ||
And we ought to talk also, you know, if we talk about things that happen in New York City, we should talk about we've got Sterling candidates also in Virginia and New Jersey. | ||
And I think he's going to see that this big, beautiful bill is about 25 points underwater. | ||
It's going to be 30 points underwater. | ||
He's going to see a massive defeat coming. | ||
And he's going to try to do anything he can to extricate himself from that defeat. | ||
And I would not put it at all past him to try to call martial law or declare that there's some kind of national emergency in the country or anything like that, because the hoof prints are coming. | ||
You can hear them, and they're going to get a shellacking in gunbook for the moment. | ||
Look at these words he's using. | ||
unidentified
|
He's got the weirdest vocabulary of all time capable of such perfidy as suggested by James Carville. | |
After hearing Carville, I'm buying a condo in Luxembourg tomorrow. | ||
I'm getting out of martial law. | ||
My God, they're going to have tanks in my driveway? | ||
Oh, oh. | ||
No, I don't believe that will happen. | ||
I'm willing to bet James 18 muffalettas that there will not be martial law. | ||
I'll throw him in some crawfish and whatever else he wants. | ||
And this kind of, I don't know, scare tactic, would that be it? | ||
I'm not scared. | ||
Maybe Stephen Ave's a little scared. | ||
unidentified
|
He's got a little perspiration there on his forehead. | |
But I'm not worried about it. | ||
And by the way, you're sweaty. | ||
unidentified
|
I think that the economy will dictate who wins. | |
Yeah, no, you call it scare tactics. | ||
I would call it shrieking, hysterical delusion. | ||
But yeah, one or the other, they're both valid, totally applicable. | ||
Yeah, I'm not scared either. | ||
I mean, I'm not exactly against it, but I mean, look, we got to take Carville seriously. | ||
I mean, could you imagine? | ||
Can you imagine what Trump could do if he wanted to stay in power, if he wanted to rig an election? | ||
I mean, can you imagine if Trump did something like released a biocreated lab on purpose and infected the whole United States in order to put the whole country under lockdown that he tells us is only two weeks, but then he extends it out even further, which is in fact de facto martial law. | ||
And that would give him the right and practically the obligation to completely upend the entire electoral process to the extent to which we can't even confirm whether or not the votes cast were valid or not. | ||
The whole electoral system would be thrown into chaos. | ||
And the worst part is, if the Democrats tried to protest, then he would declare a national emergency and use that to actually impose martial law and arrest mass numbers of Democratic activists just for opposing him and expressing their dissatisfaction through First Amendment protected protest activity. | ||
I mean, could you imagine if such a thing had happened or could happen in the future? | ||
I mean, what would be the response to that? | ||
What would be the applicable, appropriate response to the rigging of the election? | ||
I think if we'd asked James Carville, he'd probably rightfully recognize that everybody involved in the martial law shutdown vote rigging stolen election should be executed on the public square. | ||
Probably everybody involved in that heinous series of events should be executed by the state for treason. | ||
Hopefully we never get to that point. | ||
All right, folks, we're having fun today. | ||
It feels like a Friday show. | ||
Even though it's Thursday. | ||
Because tomorrow, of course, we will be off. | ||
All of you should be off. | ||
And folks, just be careful with the fireworks. | ||
I don't want anybody listening to my voice to be missing a limb next time you hear from me. | ||
So I think we'll take a moment here, as it is the last show before, Independence Day. | ||
Trump's kicking off the 250th year anniversary celebration with a speech in Des Moines, Iowa, I believe, today. | ||
I think maybe we'll do some digging on the other side into some realities about the American Revolution that most people aren't aware of, and that is the corporate influence of things like the British East India Company and the way in which tyranny was being saddled on the American colonists. | ||
Because the sort of elementary understanding that most people have of the revolution doesn't make any sense because it's not accurate or complete. | ||
You often hear the refrain of, you know, our forefathers did a revolution over 2% tax on tea. | ||
And yeah, that sounds ridiculous because it is. | ||
That's not what was happening. | ||
It's actually not what was happening. | ||
In fact, what was happening is they were trying to reorganize the entire governance structure of the colonies to eradicate the traditional hundred years of self-rule that the colonies had enjoyed. | ||
And they wanted to essentially enslave them by stripping their local town councils of any power whatsoever and investing the entire governmental power into the imperial appointees dictated by the British East India Company. | ||
So we'll get into the actual mechanisms and forces behind the revolution. | ||
But I want to go to probably the most famous speech from the revolution, Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death. | ||
And like I said at the beginning of the show, it's be like looking into an ancient mirror. | ||
And a lot of what Patrick Henry says, just like a lot of what the Declaration of Independence says, applies as much today as it did back then. | ||
Here's the famous Patrick Henry speech, including the iconic quote, give me liberty or give me death. | ||
Patrick Henry, the order of the revolution. | ||
Here it is. | ||
240 years ago today, Patrick Henry delivered his liberty or death speech at St. John's Church in Richmond, Virginia. | ||
unidentified
|
There is no longer any ground for hope. | |
If we wish to be free, if we wish to preserve inviolate those inestimable privileges which belong to us as free men, if we mean not basely to abandon the noble struggle in which we have been so long engaged, | ||
in which we have pledged ourselves never to abandon until the glorious object of our struggle be obtained, then we must fight. | ||
We must fight! | ||
The God of hosts is all we have left of! | ||
Arms! | ||
Arms, Mr. Henry! | ||
What arms? | ||
We're weak, son! | ||
We're weak! | ||
They tell us that we are weak. | ||
Unable to cope with so powerful an adversary. | ||
But when shall we be stronger? | ||
Will it be the next week or the next year? | ||
Will it be when we are totally disarmed and a British guard shall be stationed in every house? | ||
Shall we acquire the means of effectual resistance by lying supinely on our backs, hugging the delusive phantom of hope until our enemy hath bound us hand and foot? | ||
Sir, we are not weak if we make a proper use of those means the God of nature hath placed in our power. | ||
Three millions of people, armed in the holy cause of liberty, and in such a country that which we Possess are invincible by any force our enemy can send against us. | ||
Besides, sir, we shall not fight our battles alone. | ||
There is a just God who presides over the destinies of nations, who will raise up friends to fight our battles for us. | ||
The battle, sir, is not to the strong alone. | ||
It is to the vigilant, the active, the brave. | ||
Besides, sirs, we have no election. | ||
Should we be base enough to desire it, it is now already too late to retire from the contest. | ||
There is no retreat, but in submission and slavery. | ||
Our chains are forged and a clanking may be heard upon the plains of Boston. | ||
The war is inevitable, and let it come. | ||
Peace. | ||
In vain to extenuate the men. | ||
Gentlemen, make my peace, peace. | ||
But there is no peace. | ||
The war is actually begun. | ||
The next gale that blows from the north shall bring to our ears the clash of resounding arms. | ||
Our brethren are already in the field. | ||
Why stand we here idle? | ||
What is it that they wish? | ||
What would they have? | ||
Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? | ||
forbidden almighty god I know not what course others may take, but as for me, give me liberty! | ||
Oh, give me death! | ||
Well, set it to us! | ||
Give it to us, Mr. Henry! | ||
Now, St. John's Church Foundation preserving legacy of liberty since 1938. | ||
It was a pretty good speech. | ||
Pretty rousing, pretty rousing stuff. | ||
Now, we don't need to get too into it, but if you are interested in educating yourself on this Independence Day, there are a lot of good, there's a really great YouTube lecture. | ||
I should have cut out some clips from it, but really the whole thing is excellent. | ||
If you just search British East India Company, American Revolution, that's what the tax on tea was about. | ||
And that's what in just to sum it up here, basically the British East India Company was having trouble in India economically. | ||
And so they reorganized in India and basically created a system by which they could exert massive control and essentially work around or disempower the local governments in India. | ||
And it's kind of weird because it's like the British East India Company won this big battle against the Mughals and basically took over Bengal. | ||
And it's weird because they won this big battle and were getting like massive revenue because they just took over all of India and were collecting taxes from everybody. | ||
But then somehow they were also in dire financial straits and had to be bailed out by the British government. | ||
And so the tax on tea was a bailout. | ||
It was a corporate bailout of the British East India Company, where they allowed the British East India Company to sell tea directly to the colonies, which undercut the local markets and massively disadvantaged the colonists. | ||
And long story short, and without getting into the details, essentially, the way that Britain was doing it was the colonies had been more or less in self-governance since their founding. | ||
And they had town councils and mayors, and you would have sort of imperial governors, but they were more sort of symbolic. | ||
And it was the people who decided where and how their tax money was spent in the colonies. | ||
And that's what was changing. | ||
And they were being stripped of their ability to actually have a say in their own governance. | ||
And they were reorganizing the management structure of the colonies to where there were imperial governors being put in who would supersede all of the town councils, all of the local native organizations for the purpose of massively exploiting them. | ||
And it's what they did in India. | ||
And basically, the colonists looked over at India, saw what was happening there. | ||
And what was happening there was the British East India Company was causing famines that were killing millions of people. | ||
And then they saw that, oh, they're about to do that here. | ||
They're about to do the same reorganization they did in India, but they're about to do it to us, which means we'll be stripped of all of our say. | ||
We don't have members in parliament. | ||
We can't vote. | ||
You know, we can't express ourselves through voting in the UK Parliament. | ||
And now they're stripping us of our town councils and ability to plot our own destiny here. | ||
And every move they made to try to retain some sovereignty or reject the exploitation by the British East India Company was met with crushing repression. | ||
In response to the tax on tea, which again, and it wasn't even necessarily a tax on tea, it was the fact that the British East India Company, basically how it would work was that it used to be the British East India Company would have to go to England and sell its tea there. | ||
And then there would be wholesalers that would repackage it and sell it to the colonies. | ||
Then they said, okay, you can just go and sell it directly to the colonies, which undercut all of the people. | ||
I mean, it's sort of complicated economic stuff, but it wasn't just about, oh my gosh, they're taxing me 3% on tea. | ||
Let's go throw it all in the harbor. | ||
It wasn't quite that simple. | ||
The British East India Company was struggling financially as of 1773, and the British government passed the Tea Act to bail it out. | ||
This act allowed the company to sell surplus tea directly to the American colonies at a reduced price, undercutting local merchants and maintaining monopoly on tea imports. | ||
It also retained a small tax on tea from the earlier Townsend Acts, which the colonies viewed as taxation without representation. | ||
That led to the Boston Tea Party. | ||
In response to the Boston Tea Party, the British government retaliated with the Coercive Acts, also called the Intolerable Acts in 1774, which punished Massachusetts by closing Boston Harbor and imposing other punitive measures. | ||
These acts galvanized colonial resistance, uniting the colonies and leading to the First Continental Congress in 1774, a key step towards revolution. | ||
The East India Company's monopoly practices and the British government's support for them fueled colonial grievances about mercantilism and the lack of economic autonomy. | ||
This resentment contributed to broader revolutionary sentiment as colonists sought greater control over their trade and governance. | ||
While the East India Company was not directly involved in the fighting, the role of the tea trade and the resulting policies were catalysts for key events that precipitated the American Revolution. | ||
The company's actions, backed by British parliamentary decisions, helped ignite colonial anger over economic exploitation and lack of representation, setting the stage towards the push for independence. | ||
And just for the American Revolution, roughly the 1670s and 1770s, the British East India Company was consolidating its power with India, in India, with significant developments that indirectly influenced events in the American colonies. | ||
There was the Battle of Plassey in 1757, in which the British East India Company achieved victory led by Robert Clive. | ||
It marked a turning point, establishing British dominance in Bengal. | ||
This secured immense wealth from Bengal's revenues, which fueled the company's expansion and influence in India and beyond. | ||
After feeding the Mughal forces at the Battle of Buxar in 1764, the company gained the right to collect taxes in Bengal, Bihar, and Orissa. | ||
On behalf of the Mughal Emperor, this gave the company vast economic power, making it a quasi-state entity with significant control over Indian territories. | ||
But their aggressive revenue collection and trade monopolies led to economic disruption in India, including famines like the Bengal famine of 1770, which killed millions. | ||
The company's mismanagement and corruption drew scrutiny in Britain, prompting parliamentary intervention to regulate its activities, like the Regulating Act of 1773. | ||
To address the company's financial troubles and governance issues, the British Parliament passed the Regulating Act, which increased government oversight of the company's operations in India. | ||
This act was part of broader British efforts to centralize imperial control, which also affected policies towards the American colonies. | ||
So again, you had this massive influence from what the British East India Company was doing, the lessons they were learning, and how they were trying to apply those same things in America. | ||
This was about more than taxes. | ||
It was about sovereignty and the ability for a people to dictate its own destiny or whether they were just unwilling subjects of a hostile foreign government. | ||
Kind of like how we are now. | ||
It's a little bit like the situation we're in right now, if you think about it. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
And we could go on and on, but at the end of the day, there's a reason why Infowars has always adopted classic Americana Founding Fathers, American imagery, and symbolism. | ||
And it's not out of sheer just indoctrinated patriotism. | ||
It's because the Founding Fathers were truly almost inexplicably great people, great in every possible sense of the word. | ||
Who did really the unthinkable? | ||
I mean, there had been no legitimate republic in the world since the collapse of the Roman Empire. | ||
I mean, Venice was a republic for a little while longer, but even that was sort of a mercantile consortium rather than a true republic. | ||
And it's just worth reminding everybody, since everybody takes everything for granted now. | ||
These things are just obvious. | ||
Human rights are a great thing, and self-determination is a natural right you have. | ||
And of course, people should have a say over the governance of their country. | ||
Like, you understand that did not exist before 1776. | ||
That wasn't a thing. | ||
And it wasn't a thing for a long time after 1776, except in America. | ||
France tried it and went completely off the rails. | ||
Couldn't handle it. | ||
Caused a bunch of big issues. | ||
Sorry about that. | ||
Sorry about that. | ||
I feel a little bit responsible for that. | ||
I feel like America kind of made it look so good and fun and easy to become a republic. | ||
And France learned the hard way. | ||
It ain't that easy. | ||
But I've often referenced the book. | ||
I believe it's The Far Side of the World. | ||
It's one of the series, the Master and Commander series. | ||
It's actually one of the books that the movie was based off of. | ||
Movies based off a combination of three of the books. | ||
But there's a scene in which the British ship picks up an American sailor who's been shipwrecked. | ||
And they have these conversations where the British people are like trying to even understand what it means to not have a master. | ||
And like they don't get it. | ||
They're like, but who tells you what to do? | ||
And the guy's like, Nobody. | ||
And they're like, okay, but who do you serve? | ||
And he's like, myself. | ||
And like, they can't, they can't quite understand it because it was such a unique thing. | ||
Everybody in the world was subject to somebody else, except the kings. | ||
Like before 1776, the kings were free. | ||
Everybody else was a subject. | ||
Everybody, everybody, everybody. | ||
And it was, I mean, you were a subject, especially when it comes to like the Navy or something like that. | ||
You had that sort of noble sovereignty extended down to where the captain of a ship had ultimate power over life and death. | ||
There was no jury. | ||
There was no trial. | ||
If he thought it was appropriate for one of his sailors to be thrown overboard, he was thrown overboard. | ||
Like that was it. | ||
There were no human rights as we conceive them today. | ||
There was no independence as we perceive it. | ||
And this idea that you would not have a master, not have a boss isn't even the right word, a master, that you would not have a master was something utterly unique. | ||
And it was like a superpower. | ||
I mean, in that way, on the spectrum of, you know, liberty and sovereignty, it pretty much put every American on the same status as the king of England, right? | ||
Nobody else in England could say, I have no master. | ||
Nobody else in England could say, I'm not a subject of somebody. | ||
Everybody in America said, I am a sovereign. | ||
I am sovereign. | ||
I am the top of the pyramid. | ||
And nobody can tell me what to do. | ||
And nobody can compel me to do something against my will. | ||
And that is unimaginably valuable. | ||
And especially when we look around the world today, we've made the point often, it's not about reverting to some earlier time in the 19th century. | ||
What the globalists are trying to do is undo 1776. | ||
They're trying to get back into a world where everybody is a subject, where everybody is a slave to one degree or another. | ||
And that's what we're losing. | ||
And to achieve that in the first place took 1,776 years to build up to. | ||
It took nearly 2,000 years of human development in Christendom to get to the point where humanity could handle not having kings, not having sovereigns. | ||
An enlightened populace, an intelligent, an active, participatory populace was only possible from the painstaking development over the course of millennia. | ||
And we're really at risk of losing all that. | ||
We're really at risk of just devolving back into barbarism and slavery and subjecthood. | ||
Just keep that on your mind. | ||
Keep that on your mind, please, this 4th of July. | ||
That's not just about fireworks and cooking hot dogs. | ||
It's actually about celebrating this utterly unique and monumentally powerful force of liberty that America unleashed on the world in 1776 and that ever since then the bad guys have been desperately trying to claw back. | ||
And we can't let them. | ||
And so we won't. | ||
All right, I got some more videos to get to here, but we are running out of time. | ||
And in fact, we are going to be joined by Brandon Morello in the next hour talk about the P. Diddy trial. | ||
She's been keeping track of this the whole time. | ||
And we'll talk to her about the outcome, the decisions that were made, what he was guilty on, what he's not guilty on. | ||
But really, we're going to be looking behind the curtain. | ||
What was this trial really about? | ||
What is still being covered up? | ||
And how did Maureen Comey manage the whole affair? | ||
Just another absurdity that we have to deal with. | ||
But folks, if you want to do the revolutionary thing, if you want to support an outlet that is unambiguously championed the spirit of 1776 for its entire existence, please do go to thealxjonesstore.com. | ||
Go to thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
Take advantage of the 4th of July super sale. | ||
Buy one, get one free on just about every product. | ||
Get yourself some apparel. | ||
Get yourself some patriotic t-shirts, hats, hoodies. | ||
Buy one, get one free on everything. | ||
And when these sell out, we have no plans to reprint any of them. | ||
And so you're really going to want to go take advantage of this sale. | ||
It's the biggest sale we've ever had at thealixjonesstore.com. | ||
Go to thealxjonstore.com slash Harrison if you want to let them know who sent you. | ||
You get free shipping on all orders over $99 plus additional discounts when you are a member of the Alex Jones VIP Club. | ||
Sign up today, thealexjonestestore.com slash Harrison. | ||
Let them know who sent you. | ||
Celebrate Independence Day by supporting an outlet that truly embodies the spirit of 1776 and knows that the answer to 2025 is 1776. | ||
We'll be back on the other side. | ||
Stay with us. | ||
For coming, I'm going to be discussing the safety label update for myocarditis associated with mRNA COVID vaccines, which we just put forward. | ||
This came out on June 25th, 2025. | ||
The FDA approved a required updated warning, which is a class warning for all mRNA COVID-19 vaccines in conjunction with the manufacturers. | ||
I'm going to walk you through the updated warning and the basis for the warning. | ||
First of all, I'd like to thank David Caslow and the vaccine team and Richard Forchey and the pharmacical vigilance team for writing, coordinating, and deploying this safety label change. | ||
I'd also like to note this SMLC was initiated prior to my joining the agency. | ||
And note, I'm not using the FDA branch abbreviations in the hopes that this presentation will be more accessible to the general public. | ||
The updated safety label. | ||
The updated safety label for the mRNA COVID vaccines harmonizes the age range across products and adds additional data about the adverse event of myocarditis and what we know. | ||
It's based on two factors. | ||
It's based first on the unadjusted crude incident rate from the 2023 to 2024 formulation, and it's also based on persistent and concerning cardiac MR findings. | ||
So this is a slide that we put together. | ||
This is the FDA analysis of the BEST system, which is an observational data system that captures myocarditis and pericarditis following, immediately afterwards, the first seven days, COVID-19 mRNA vaccination. | ||
And what you see here is that even in 2023-2024, the last year for which we have data, you see a rate of myoc and pericarditis of eight out of a million in all persons in this age range. | ||
And in the highest risk demographic group, young men between the ages of 12 and 24, it's about 27 per million. | ||
Notably, the best data set does not allow us to disambiguate the risk by product. | ||
And as such, this is a class mRNA safety label. | ||
The second piece of evidence that is captured in the new safety label update is some concerning findings we've noted with late gadolinium enhancement. | ||
Now, late gadolinium enhancement is a radiographic abnormality seen on cardiac resonance imaging, and this is how it's been described prior to in the literature in the context of myocarditis. | ||
Mild, sorry, patchy myocardial and focal supecardial enhancement as an expression of potentially irreversible injury is how it's been described. | ||
The FDA notably funded a study led by Jane and colleagues in 2024, which showed among hospitalized patients with COVID-19 induced myocarditis, a high proportion, the majority, had initial late gadolinium enhancement on cardiac MR. But most concerningly, at five months of follow-up, 60% of these patients continued to have LGE. | ||
And our results for late gadolinium enhancement are consistent with many, many others, as I'll show you here. | ||
This was a study from Australia that followed post-six months for post-COVID-19 vaccine-induced myocarditis. | ||
Over half of the patients were still reporting symptoms. | ||
67% had abnormal follow-up cardiac MRs, and 35% showed what was listed as evidence of fibrosis. | ||
I did a quick systematic review pulling all available publications documenting late gallium enhancement, and these are some takeaway summaries. | ||
92% is occurring in men, 90% have LGE at presentation, but most concerning 72% have persistent LGE even months thereafter, very consistent with the FDA-sponsored study. | ||
Late gallium enhancement is not a benign clinical finding. | ||
Multiple studies document that LGE is a poor prognostic factor. | ||
That's in many cardiac settings, including for patients with myocarditis. | ||
LGE has been associated with increased future cardiovascular events and even increased mortality. | ||
We do not know the precise implications for LGE from vaccine-induced myocarditis, in part because the follow-up is necessarily so limited. | ||
For this reason, the US FDA and the sponsors have issued an SLC with the following two main points. | ||
One, the updated unadjusted incidence of myocarditis and or pericarditis was approximately 27 per million, or 1 in 37,000, in males 12 to 24 years of age for the 2023 to 2024 formulation. | ||
And two, at a median follow-up of approximately 5 percent. | ||
That's the announcement from the FDA. | ||
FDA steps up assessment of myocarditis following mRNA COVID-19 jabs. | ||
So it won't stop you from getting the virus. | ||
It won't stop you from dying from the virus, but it will make your heart explode. | ||
All right, what's up, ladies and gentlemen? | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
We're going to be joined here in just a moment by Brianna Morello, talking about the Diddy verdict. | ||
Sean Diddy Combs has been found guilty on two counts of traveling to engage in prostitution, but he was declared not guilty on the more extreme charges that he faced. | ||
However, he was denied bail and remains in jail. | ||
And as far as I understand it, I believe he still faces something like a decade in prison once he's sentenced for these crimes that he was found guilty on. | ||
Sean Diddy Combs' verdict. | ||
Combs won't be freed before sentencing. | ||
Combs was acquitted on racketeering and sex trafficking charges, but found guilty of lesser charges. | ||
He denied all of the allegations, of course. | ||
And the whole trial was replete with salacious details. | ||
Do we have Brianna on? | ||
All right, Brianna Morello. | ||
Thanks so much for joining us. | ||
Of course, you can follow Brianna on X at Brianna Morello. | ||
Welcome to the show, Brianna. | ||
Hi, Harrison. | ||
Thank you for having me. | ||
Well, it's my pleasure, and I'm glad you're here to inform me on this, because I got to be honest, I didn't pay super close attention to the Diddy trial every time I did. | ||
It was just salacious, like weird sex details. | ||
And I was like, you know what? | ||
I think I know what's going on here. | ||
I don't need to listen to this. | ||
But you followed the whole trial through all its twists and turns. | ||
Just give us the rundown. | ||
What happened here? | ||
Yeah, well, unfortunately, it just looked like a show trial, ultimately. | ||
They embarrassed Iddy, obviously, putting out his darkest secrets on the criminal trial floor and kind of detailed what many of us wouldn't want if we were in his shoes to be aired out. | ||
His family there leaving several times, his children, because they didn't want to hear all the details. | ||
Like you just said, it was pretty gross. | ||
But the reality of it is this. | ||
We had a consistency here, and that is that James Comey's daughter was the lead prosecutor in this case and also Ghelene Maxwell. | ||
And for some reason, while she's trying to argue that Diddy was trafficking sex crime victims, she failed to say who he was trafficking those victims to. | ||
And ultimately, what we have here now is we have the fact that not a single celebrity was mentioned in any of this. | ||
our federal government now has these freak off sex party tapes right now. | ||
They have possession of them. | ||
But for some reason, we don't know who's featured in any of these recordings. | ||
I know your audience is probably well aware of the simple fact that there was an ex-girlfriend named Cassie who testified for several days throughout the trial, obviously disclosing the fact that she was the main subject in a lot of these sex parties. | ||
But again, not saying who she was really there with besides sex workers. | ||
If you remember, I know I do. | ||
Back when I was growing up, I remember seeing Diddy throwing these parties and it was all over MTV and all these celebrities were there. | ||
But for some reason, we have a criminal trial and we don't seem to know who is physically present during all of these parties. | ||
Again, this seems like a cover-up. | ||
It seems like a cover-up mainly because, again, James Comey's daughter not only was here for this criminal trial as a lead prosecutor, but she was also lead prosecutor in Ghillene Maxwell's sex trafficking trial and failed to tell anyone during the trial who Epstein and Maxwell were sex trafficking these victims to. | ||
So that's the one major consistency that sticks out here. | ||
Now, I know a lot of people view Diddy as a horrible person. | ||
I know I do as well. | ||
Obviously, we've seen the tape of him beating his ex-girlfriend Cassie, but he wasn't on trial for that. | ||
Like you detailed, he was on trial for sex trafficking, racketeering, and transporting prostitutes, pretty much. | ||
And they really didn't make a clear argue on it. | ||
Now, let's talk about racketeering. | ||
RICO is a big standard you'd have to meet to prove RICO in the criminal courtroom. | ||
Ultimately, most lawyers can't even explain to a jury what RICO really means. | ||
And that's the key point in all of this. | ||
The prosecutors didn't really outline RICO at all, I'd have to say. | ||
I have no idea how they even came about justifying that charge because RICO means criminal enterprise. | ||
How is only one person running a criminal enterprise? | ||
They charge no one else with RICO in Diddy's case. | ||
So again, it didn't seem to make sense. | ||
It seemed like they were intentionally overcharging Diddy. | ||
And I think the jury really didn't have much to go on. | ||
I think the two charges they did convict him on are probably the two that actually make sense. | ||
And the other three really didn't stick. | ||
And there's reasons for that. | ||
Well, and there's so much about this trial that sort of early on, we were hearing all of this stuff about the way that his bodyguards were apparently, you know, in with the cop. | ||
So, you know, some of his victims would go to the police and it would all sort of be covered up. | ||
I mean, there was a lot of like collusion that was discussed, but it was, it was all sort of gossip. | ||
And I expected some of that to come out, but it sounds like they never really even talked about that, like how he got away with this and how former accusations had been shoved under the rug because of his connections with very high up people and a number of industries, including the governments, not just in America, but specifically in California, the local police there, I know, were embroiled in a lot of it. | ||
Did any of that come to the surface during the trial? | ||
Not really. | ||
I mean, there was one individual who was a security guard at the hotel during that assault that you saw just a couple of minutes ago on your screen. | ||
And he came up after the incident and testified, but he testified that he was paid off $100,000 in a brown bag and he never spoke of it again. | ||
He also apparently is a law enforcement officer now after that. | ||
I don't know how he still has a job openly admitting that he took a bribe, which is compelling in itself. | ||
But it seems like money was shifted around for a lot of this. | ||
A lot of people saying they were paid off. | ||
You know, you might recall there was an individual who was accused of shooting up the Trump Hotel in Miami. | ||
He was someone who told police that he contracted herpes during his exchange with Cassie and Diddy, and that he sued and he was paid a multi-million dollar settlement to shut up and never talk about it again. | ||
Cassie, while on the stand, was questioned about these sex parties and openly admitted that she did get mouth sores. | ||
I know it sounds really gross to detail all of this, but saying that she did get mouth sores and Diddy continued to force her to go out there and participate in these parties. | ||
But again, it just goes to show that everyone was paid off because when Cassie filed that lawsuit in New York City, she settled, and they admitted it on the stand for $20 million against Diddy. | ||
So everyone was paid off, it seems like, to shut up and not talk about these things. | ||
And it just didn't stick for some reason, the federal government sweeping in after Cassie filed that lawsuit and the government going right after him and raiding his home. | ||
Now, like, we could be conspiracy theorists here, or we could just be realists, I guess, at this point. | ||
I think that the government knew that they really weren't going to get Diddy on any of those charges. | ||
I think it was all about justifying getting a warrant for his home and obtaining the blackmail that he had against others because Cassie said that he recorded these sex parties and then threatened her and blackmailed her with the footage. | ||
And so ultimately now, who has the footage? | ||
Well, the government has the footage now. | ||
And if you recall, too, they raided his home March of 2024. | ||
And then, you know, when Kamala Harris needed some assistance, celebrities that came forward that really weren't interested in getting involved in the presidential cycle this time around were suddenly making their way to the stage. | ||
People like Usher, there were all these audio recordings of Usher saying that he really just didn't want to participate in the election and endorse anyone. | ||
And then suddenly he was in Georgia on stage endorsing Kamala Harris and looked very uncomfortable about it. | ||
Now, obviously, Usher was someone who had spent his teen years in Diddy's home. | ||
He also was another individual who allegedly was sued for by three other individuals. | ||
We don't know the outcome that much, but he was also sued for what they alleged, not telling them about him having herpes. | ||
Again, it all just seems like these people are in the same parties in the same groups, but that's just speculation, I guess, on that front because we haven't been able to confirm any of it. | ||
But it should have been confirmed during the criminal trial. | ||
Because again, if you're accusing Diddy of racketeering and running a criminal enterprise, well, all those that were involved in these sex parties are also involved in racketeering. | ||
So why weren't charges filed against them? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And again, you know, we're shown videos of, you know, or images of P. Diddy with Usher. | ||
And I mean, that whole thing was weird. | ||
He was like his legal guardian, I think, at a certain point. | ||
That was Usher, right? | ||
And he had some camp with a weird name. | ||
Like, when this first broke, there was so much sort of bizarre stuff going on underneath the surface, you know, to the Justin Bieber aspect of it. | ||
And it was more about, at least my interest in it, was more about the music industry and how it was manipulated and how there was, you know, blackmail and coercion going on and how, you know, these are the people that are making the music that everybody's listening to and how you sort of could control which artists got popular and which didn't. | ||
There was a lot of talk about P. Diddy sort of explaining to his protege saying, yeah, we choose people who are not talented because then they are stuck with us. | ||
You know, if you choose a talented person as your star, then they can leave at any point because they're talented. | ||
They can go to somebody else and get a different deal or go on a different organization that'll support them. | ||
And if they're talented, they'll have success anywhere. | ||
But if you choose somebody who's not talented and you make them a star and they leave you, they're not going to get any work. | ||
So they're stuck with you then. | ||
So there's a lot more about like coercion and the industry being manipulated and popular culture being manipulated and the fact that P. Diddy had sort of learned how to do this from his proteges that did this all through Motown and controlled the music industry that way. | ||
Did any of that come up? | ||
Because when this first broke, it seemed like such a bigger story and more nefarious and more corruption and manipulation, blackmail. | ||
And then by the end, it's like, well, actually, this is just a trial about P. Diddy himself and he was kind of just a gross pervert. | ||
And it's like, there's a lot more going on under the surface. | ||
It's like we got a glimpse. | ||
It's like they lifted up the rug for a second and we saw all the dirt and grime underneath, but then they put it back down and went, oh, this isn't about that. | ||
It's about P. Diddy alone and that's all. | ||
But I mean, this required a network to be able to carry off, right? | ||
This required people in positions of power to silence victims. | ||
I mean, did any of that come to the surface or was any of that adjudicated during this trial? | ||
Or, you know, how did they avoid it, if not? | ||
Yeah, the only person who we really heard talk about that was, again, Cassie. | ||
I mean, we didn't hear about it from anyone else. | ||
Cassie pretty much came out and said that she had a 10 album deal, which is unheard of because although in high school, I probably liked her music to work out to, she was probably a little bit below average of a musician. | ||
She really wasn't that talented. | ||
And so for her to get hit with a 10 album deal, it sounded like he was trying to lock her down. | ||
But that's all we heard about. | ||
We didn't hear about anyone else. | ||
And again, like you just said, we all thought I had high expectations. | ||
I thought we were going to come in here and listen to the details behind the scenes, but we really didn't hear much. | ||
He had someone from Danny D. Kane, Kane, one of the members, testify, but it was only about the abuse that she had witnessed. | ||
And again, although, and his attorneys weren't even arguing this, I mean, even in opening statements, they came in and said, listen, you're going to see a video. | ||
We're not sitting here and saying that he's a good guy. | ||
But the reality of it is you're not here because he was abusing women. | ||
You're here because of sex trafficking and racketeering. | ||
So while they're showing these, the video of him abusing Cassie, is it really sex trafficking? | ||
No, because there's text messages that are being revealed of hers where she seems enthusiastic about these sex parties. | ||
She's also picking the prostitutes for the next party. | ||
In one of their exchanges, I think it was brought up by the defense. | ||
She's actually asking for a female sex worker rather than a male sex worker for their next sex party. | ||
And she's sending that back and forth. | ||
She's also very excited about the next sex party that they're about to have. | ||
And she's letting Diddy know that. | ||
So although, yes, she is a victim of domestic violence, it's very, very obvious of that. | ||
It's really hard to claim that she is a sex trafficking victim. | ||
And then they also have a previous ex-girlfriend as well, Jane. | ||
And it was very unclear what her role in Diddy's life still is currently. | ||
We know that there might be some financial agreements still involved between the two of them, but she detailed a very similar claim that Cassie was making about it starting off as a regular relationship and then him kind of just passing her around to other guys and that just becoming their norm. | ||
So again, lots of people at these parties. | ||
I mean, you're showing the images of the white party. | ||
I remember the white parties were a big thing out in the Hamptons for Diddy and that's something we don't hear about. | ||
We didn't really hear about what actually took place there. | ||
So it really doesn't make any sense unless you're involved in a massive cover-up. | ||
And again, all the people that I've seen thus far are actually people who are backing Democrats. | ||
I mean, a lot of these people who would go to Diddy parties all the time came out swinging for Kamala Harris when she was down in the polls. | ||
So I honestly, at this point, just think that the government took possession of these sex tapes and just used the blackmail against these individuals because there's nothing else that really makes sense here. | ||
Diddy, obviously a horrible person, was able to pay people into silence. | ||
We saw that with Cassie. | ||
As soon as Cassie filed that lawsuit, he settled for $20 million 24 hours later. | ||
And then more lawsuits were filed shortly after. | ||
But again, I don't understand how any of this wasn't leaked prior unless he really was just that great at passing around brown bags full of cash. | ||
Well, you know, part of it is the fact that this is an aspect of coercion, right? | ||
And, you know, I always think back to the big scandal with the Backstreet Boys and InSync and their producer that was basically exploiting them. | ||
And I remember, you know, watching a documentary about them one time and hearing the story of how they signed their record deal with him. | ||
And, you know, these guys were nobodies. | ||
I mean, they were lower income kids from Florida who had no real hope of a future of stardom. | ||
But this guy comes along, you know, sort of either, they're good at dancing. | ||
They have good voices. | ||
He brings them all to New York with their parents and he puts a contract in front of them and basically says, I'm going to exploit you, but I'm going to make you stars. | ||
I have the power to make you an A-list celebrity the world over, a multi-millionaire. | ||
You're going to go down in history and you just got to sign here. | ||
And they get them to sign the contracts. | ||
And I always relate this to sort of the conspiratorial concept where they sort of have to tell you what they're doing before they do it. | ||
There are all these little hints of what's going to come before it actually happens. | ||
A lot of people interpret that as sort of an occultic ritual thing where they have to do it to offload the karmic retribution they might receive. | ||
But I see it as this is the way corruption works. | ||
You get the people involved in their own exploitation. | ||
You get them to sign on the paper and agree to their own exploitation. | ||
And then there is no retribution you can get because you've agreed to it. | ||
You can't go to a judge and say, this guy exploited me. | ||
He'll just hold up the contract and saying, he said I could. | ||
He agreed to let me. | ||
So, you know, there's that aspect, right? | ||
This is the way control and coercion works is you get people in on it, and then they have no ability to go blow the whistle or expose all of this because they're exposing themselves at the same time since they're sort of participants. | ||
I mean, it shows how effective that type of coercion can be at the end of the day. | ||
Yeah, I think that he just finds desperate people who are just desperately trying to stay relevant. | ||
You know, when Cassie was asked about her relationship with Diddy, she just kept talking about how he was a star and how she was just so in awe with how famous he was. | ||
And so I think when he offered her that 10 album deal, it was a quick response from her because she's someone who probably wouldn't have received a record deal in the first place, kind of like you just outlined. | ||
But I mean, he signed so many musicians to Bad Boy. | ||
There was that show making the band on MTV. | ||
We didn't hear much about the contracts that were being tossed around for those folks. | ||
We've heard people speak out and say that he used to give out bad deals. | ||
And a lot of these girl groups, I mean, I remember it was Aubrey, one of the singers in the group who would constantly go out there and say how used they were by Diddy financially, how he would just take all their money and they would make literally just change off their albums and how enraged they were by it. | ||
But the reality of it is, is it's up to them to read the contracts and not to be desperate. | ||
But again, racketeering is what they were trying to prove. | ||
They didn't bring any of that into the courtroom. | ||
It was kind of insane to sit here and sit back and watch. | ||
And day by day, I'm going through the scripts and I'm trying to see in all these reports, unfortunately, because they don't air it on television, but I'm trying to see when the racketeering stuff is going to be brought up and when any of this is going to be relevant to RICO. | ||
And they just were never able to prove any of that. | ||
So I don't understand why they did it in the first place. | ||
From what I've heard from other great legal minds is they tell me that when you hit somebody with a RICO charge, you could usually get more evidence and there's more leniency from the courts to go out there and abstract more evidence from people like Diddy. | ||
And so that might be why they hit him with the RICO. | ||
But again, it just never felt like a RICO case. | ||
It felt like the federal government was overcharging and it was intentional. | ||
Yeah, so it seems like this was more of a cover-up than an actual trial is what you're telling me. | ||
Yeah, it does feel like a cover-up because the reality of it is you still don't know who was being, who's involved in all of this. | ||
I mean, again, it was all these elaborate, lavish parties, and the government failed to tell you who was really in attendance on all of this. | ||
Yes, they showed some screenshot images of the freak offs itself and they love to embarrass him with the baby oil comments and how many bottles of baby oil they found in his home. | ||
But again, not telling the people who was actually on those tapes. | ||
Now, Diddy probably knows who's on those tapes. | ||
And that's probably why, I mean, so normally when you're charged, the two charges that he was found guilty on, from what I understand is usually someone's not held on those two charges. | ||
They would normally be released because they don't find those to be very severe charges. | ||
But for some reason, they didn't release Diddy. | ||
Also, keep in mind, when they raided his home in Miami, he was getting ready to leave the country and they allowed him to leave. | ||
Literally, the federal government intercepted him before he jumped on his plane to leave and they had a conversation with him, it appeared, and then they let him get on his plane and leave. | ||
So if he was really a flight risk, that would have been a time to intercept him and arrest him, but they didn't do that. | ||
They let him leave and he came back to the country. | ||
So I don't understand even why the judge decision yesterday to not release him, because the reality of it is normal people who would be charged with it, especially because it's his first time being criminally convicted, normally they would let you go. | ||
They put you on house arrest. | ||
They maybe give you an ankle monitor. | ||
But for some reason, they didn't let him go. | ||
Now he's facing 10 years on both of those counts. | ||
So it's going to be interesting to see what his sentencing looks like. | ||
I could imagine if they're going, if they're fair, it probably won't be more than a couple of years in prison. | ||
But if they are trying to silence him into submission, I'd imagine the judge throws the book at him. | ||
Well, and, you know, just the fact that Maureen Comey is the prosecutor on this and was the prosecutor on Ghillane Maxwell. | ||
I mean, that alone is so suspicious to me. | ||
I mean, how did that even come about? | ||
And how do they get away with this? | ||
I mean, it just, it's a little too on the nose. | ||
Why was Maureen Comey the only prosecutor available for this case? | ||
Why was she chosen? | ||
Do we have any insight into that? | ||
They never told us. | ||
And that's the problem with this, right? | ||
Because Pamponi obviously took over the DOJ and she could have made the switch if she really wanted to, but Pam Bonnie didn't. | ||
And so we're all sitting here wondering, well, why the heck is another Comey on this case? | ||
And they let it rock. | ||
There were other, I believe there was up to seven other prosecutors, but Maureen Comey was the lead prosecutor. | ||
So she was the head boss in charge of all of this. | ||
And so again, it just doesn't seem to make any sense as to why they allowed it to go on. | ||
Because if you want people to believe in what you're actually saying is true, well, you wouldn't have somebody with such a questionable background running the show for this Diddy trial. | ||
So, and they could have delayed it. | ||
They could have said, we're going to switch out prosecutors and we're going to delay this. | ||
Also, I don't know why, but TMZ and all these other major outlets were pushing it. | ||
But all of the prosecutors who were trying this case, all of them were white females. | ||
And they thought that that was actually a disadvantage, given the fact that Diddy is a black male. | ||
They all kept drilling that point home that they should have some kind of minority on, a female minority on the prosecution side. | ||
But they thought because it was all white women prosecuting Diddy that it was going to look bad. | ||
I don't even know how to unpack that one. | ||
I know. | ||
unidentified
|
I know. | |
Just throwing it out there. | ||
The level of race baiting stuff. | ||
Yeah, no, it's all completely absurd. | ||
So now we await the sentencing. | ||
I guess he faces up to 10 years on each count, or is that 10 years combined for the two counts? | ||
10 years each count. | ||
So we'll see how it all plays out. | ||
It could just be that they're just going to give him the light sentence if they're honest, that they're trying to be honest. | ||
If they're not, though, I imagine that he would be getting the max. | ||
Well, you just have to wonder, I mean, do you think P. Diddy was the kingpin here? | ||
Or do you think he was a Patsy or, you know, a puppet himself? | ||
Because almost in the same way, Ghillaine Maxwell, you give these guys long prison sentences. | ||
And to me, that means they don't really know anything because it seems like they could make a deal. | ||
If they've got blackmail, they've got in their back pocket, they could avoid some of this, or then the blackmail would be released, but that doesn't happen. | ||
So I sort of have trouble believing that they're the kingpins of all of this. | ||
It seems almost more likely that Pittity liked the role. | ||
He liked being the one who seemed like he was in charge, but There was a greater power structure above him. | ||
What do you think about that here in the last minute we have? | ||
Yeah, I mean, everyone pretty much who testified made it seem like Diddy was the boss, the head guy in charge. | ||
I haven't seen anyone's name get called into question as to someone who might have been above Diddy. | ||
And so it does seem like he was running the show. | ||
He was also orchestrating the sex parties when he was present. | ||
So it seems like it was him running the show. | ||
I just assume that the government really wanted those tapes badly. | ||
And this is what we all had to deal with as an effect of that. | ||
Well, they got him, and I guess they'll put them in the vault with the Epstein files, and we'll never see him ever again. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us. | ||
Brianna Morello, follow Brianna on X at Brianna Morello. | ||
Incredible stuff, as always. | ||
So funny this morning, I saw you tweet out slow news day today, and then the rest of your feed is just filled with all this bombshell news. | ||
It's a crazy world. | ||
Thank you for being with us, Brianna. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Harrison. | |
All right, we'll be right back, folks. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, welcome back, folks. | |
This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, brought to you a podcast. | ||
Of course. | ||
At DOCJonesStore.com. | ||
Go to DOTJonesStore.com today. | ||
Get yourself a supplement or a piece of patriotic apparel. | ||
The hats, the shirts, the hoodies, all of them, and all the supplements. | ||
Buy one, get one free for this weekend only. | ||
Don't wait. | ||
Don't delay. | ||
Go today and support this outlet that truly tries as hard as we can to embody the spirit of 1776 on this Independence Day Eve. | ||
The AlexJonesStore.com slash Harrison. | ||
If you want to let him know who sent you. | ||
Like I said, we still have a lot to talk about. | ||
And I also want to take your calls. | ||
We're in the last segment here, but we'll take as many calls as we can to give us a call. | ||
The number to dial is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
1877-789-2539. | ||
And the crew can just, we'll just screen these as quickly as possible. | ||
And I'll go for new callers first and foremost. | ||
So give us a call. | ||
1877-789-2539. | ||
Now let's talk about immigration, not just illegal immigration, but legal immigration as well. | ||
On the illegal immigration front, there was a decision made yesterday, which kind of confuses me, because I'm pretty sure it was the day before yesterday that the Supreme Court said that district judges cannot issue nationwide injunctions countermanning Trump's orders. | ||
I was pretty sure that's what the Supreme Court decided. | ||
It was kind of a big deal. | ||
Then the very next day, a judge does exactly that. | ||
Seems like he is completely ignoring the ruling from the Supreme Court. | ||
In this case, it has to do with asylum seekers. | ||
Federal Judge Randolph D. Moss, appointed by Obama, ruled that President Trump exceeded his authority by blocking illegals in the U.S. from seeking asylum and is now ordering him to reopen the border to asylum seekers. | ||
And this has a lot of people echoing what we've been saying all along, which is we got to get rid of the asylum program. | ||
It has to go away now. | ||
We can't have it anymore. | ||
Which is a shame because, you know, it's kind of an American thing to do to be a safe harbor for political dissidents who are being hunted by their own government. | ||
It was a very nice thing that we offered the world, but they couldn't be trusted with it. | ||
They couldn't be trusted with it. | ||
They took advantage of it, and now it has to go away. | ||
And that's a shame, but that's just how it is. | ||
We are under no obligation to accept asylum seekers. | ||
Period. | ||
I mean, that's end of sentence. | ||
We are under no obligation whatsoever. | ||
It's a nice thing that we did. | ||
It was a charitable thing that we did. | ||
But at this point, we have to stop now. | ||
We have to stop. | ||
In the same way, you have to shut down a charity if they say they're a cancer research charity, but all the money goes towards buying their executive sports cars. | ||
It has to go away now. | ||
It has to go away. | ||
Will cancer research suffer? | ||
Possibly, but you were cheating and it was a fraud. | ||
So you can't do that anymore. | ||
Sorry, that has to go away now. | ||
I also still, again, don't understand how this doesn't contradict completely the ruling from the Supreme Court. | ||
And it seems like Trump is fully within his rights to ignore that ruling entirely. | ||
But that's just the illegals. | ||
What about the legal migration? | ||
What about the legal migration? | ||
Microsoft just announced a layoff, a round of layoffs, to the tune of 9,000 Americans while at the same time petitioning for 6,300 H-1B visas. | ||
Let me just run that by you again. | ||
Microsoft is laying off 9,000 of its American employees while simultaneously applying for 6,000 or more Indian employees to be welcomed over on H-1B visas. | ||
That should be illegal. | ||
That's corporate treason as far as I'm concerned. | ||
And it's an abject violation of the restrictions of the H-1B visas. | ||
The whole idea behind these H-1B visas is it's supposed to be that if you try to fill a position and just literally cannot find an American to fill it, then you can go overseas and try to find somebody. | ||
Now, the corporations have workarounds, loopholes, and ways to avoid that requirement. | ||
You know, they'll put out some ad on like one, you know, they'll put out one indeed listing and then just ignore everybody who applied and say, yeah, we couldn't find anybody. | ||
Guess we have to go get the Indians. | ||
This is not even excusable. | ||
They not only have American workers who can fill these jobs, they're already in the jobs. | ||
The jobs are already filled. | ||
They're firing the Americans So they can hire cheaper workers from India. | ||
These aren't immigrants, they're globally sourced scab workers whose entire point is undercutting the wages of the American people. | ||
Why do we allow this? | ||
Why do we allow this? | ||
9,000 people. | ||
That's a lot of people in very high-paying jobs. | ||
Oh, but Americans just, we just can't do the work, apparently. | ||
So they've laid off 9,000 people and petitioned for 6,300 H-1B visas. | ||
And, you know, we talk about it all the time. | ||
We talked about it yesterday with Hamdan. | ||
It's American tradition for the American government to oppose stuff like this. | ||
There's this false dichotomy of socialism versus capitalism where there's this idea that, oh, Microsoft wants to lay off all of its American employees so they can bring over Indians to replace them. | ||
That's capitalism. | ||
You just like have to allow it. | ||
You don't have to allow that. | ||
We should not allow this. | ||
There's no reason to allow this. | ||
It is deliberately disadvantaging Americans to save the people who own the company, this multinational corporation, a little bit of money. | ||
This is unacceptable. | ||
And if the government doesn't do something about this in the way that they always have, busting up monopolies, protecting the interests of the American worker from exploitation by these maleficent corporations, if we don't do that, what do you think happens next? | ||
What do you think happens when the younger generation sees this over and over? | ||
It's already happening. | ||
They're going to vote socialist and communist. | ||
Who doesn't have the response when they hear that Microsoft is firing 9,000 Americans to hire Indians? | ||
My first instinct is the government should seize that company. | ||
Like, they shouldn't be allowed to operate anymore. | ||
The government could, now, I don't want the government to seize it. | ||
God forbid the government take over corporations like that. | ||
But you can understand the impulse. | ||
You can understand the impulse when these corporations are so unrestricted, so unregulated, so able to exploit or in some other way disadvantage the American worker. | ||
You got to do something about this. | ||
And if we don't, don't act surprised when the socialists of the communists, using this type of stuff as a talking point, get the American people to vote for socialism and communism. | ||
And I said this on Twitter, and I had a bunch of people being like, you know, it's more likely going to be Nazis. | ||
It's going to be a fascist upright, not communist. | ||
And it's like, y'all, they're already voting for socialist and communists. | ||
There's already a socialist who's going to be mayor of New York City who's talking about taking over the privately owned buildings and making them public communes. | ||
That's already happening. | ||
If you think that the next step in this process is a fascist awakening, you're out to see. | ||
You don't actually know what's going on in the world. | ||
Now, the communists and socialists are making massive gains because they have this type of crap to point to. | ||
They can point to this and go, look at capitalism. | ||
Look at what it does. | ||
Look at how it lets people be exploited. | ||
Now, I get that that's utterly contradictory because they're also the people that are firmly in favor of immigration to an unlimited degree. | ||
I'm not saying that the communists and socialists are consistent whatsoever, but I'm saying they're using this type of crap as talking points to convince people that capitalism and the American system is ineffective at protecting the American worker, which it obviously is, if the government doesn't do anything about this. | ||
So this is the irony of the modern Republican Party, is that by being so obsequious and genucking before their god capitalism, they refuse to step in and use governmental power to restrict the power of corporations, | ||
thinking that they're preserving capitalism when in reality all they're doing is ensuring its eventual defeat at the hands of rabid communists and socialists who will use government power not to protect American workers, but to exploit them to a degree that's almost impossible to imagine right now. | ||
So you're not saving or preserving anything by ignoring this. | ||
You're not helping to, you know, for capitalism to persist by allowing these corporations to do this. | ||
You're doing the opposite. | ||
In the long-term view, if you don't do something about this, you are guaranteeing that the next socialist or communist on the ballot is going to receive a lot of votes from the youth who are utterly disillusioned for very good reason in the capitalistic nature of our current system. | ||
So do something about this for the sake of capitalism. | ||
To preserve capitalism, it is absolutely necessary to use government power to stop gigantic multinational corporations like Microsoft firing their American workers and hiring Indian ones to save a couple bucks. | ||
You got to stop this. | ||
And it's up to the Republicans to do it to show the American people, hey, we have your best interest in mind. | ||
Voting for us is a good idea because we'll make sure your job isn't sold to an Indian person. | ||
Somehow nobody else gets this. | ||
Somehow everybody else falls into this false dichotomy of capitalism versus communism. | ||
And there's a lot of sort of breakdowns of this. | ||
Microsoft laid off 116 or 17 U.S. software engineers in Redmond, then requested 2,300 foreign workers for the same roles in the same location. | ||
Second City Bureaucrat says not a nation but a transitory migrant labor camp. | ||
Certainly how our leadership sees us. | ||
That's infuriating. | ||
And remember when we talked about the, you know, things like the Tint program, where we talked about the fact that these companies could save so much money by hiring globally sourced scab workers at slave wages, that these companies are like, we're going to pay for your immigration lawyer. | ||
We're going to pay for you to have a place to stay. | ||
We're going to pay for your travel expenses. | ||
We're going to give you free child care, free preschool and child care for toddlers. | ||
they're giving them all of this stuff, including literally, you know, lawyers on retainer to deal with their immigration issues. | ||
And it's still cheaper than hiring American. | ||
That's how little they're paying people. | ||
That's how little these Indians with their fake resume from their paper university are saving them. | ||
And there's another ongoing scandal over Indian remote workers scamming Western firms. | ||
And this guy named Suhail, who I guess is a CEO of some sort, said, PSA, there's a guy named Soham Parikh in India who works at three to four startups at the same time. | ||
He's preying on YC companies and more. | ||
Beware. | ||
I fired this guy in his first week and told him to stop lying, scamming people, but he hasn't stopped a year later. | ||
No more excuses. | ||
How demoralizing is it? | ||
We've all heard the stories. | ||
You have anybody who's been looking for a job for any length of time. | ||
You know the stories of, yeah, I've put out 700 resumes this year and never gotten a call back. | ||
Imagine being an engineer in America who went to school at a good university, has good work ethic. | ||
You cannot get a job for the life of you. | ||
You apply for a year and can't get a single offer. | ||
Meanwhile, there's Indian engineers that are accepting four jobs a year that are getting hired four different times at four different firms all at once. | ||
Because that's how disadvantaged the Americans are. | ||
And the Indians are just scamming us relentlessly. | ||
And it goes on and on. | ||
That's another big, big scandal breaking right now. | ||
Let's go out to your calls for the last few minutes. | ||
We've got Tim in Seattle. | ||
Tim in Seattle, thank you for calling in about the gap between Trump and Jones. | ||
Go ahead, Tim. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, Harrison, good show. | |
I'm trying to figure out how we can get the establishment to stop giving a slip service to the independent media that is eventually going to take over the entire media sphere in the next 10, 15 years. | ||
I would like to have Trump and Jones have a conversation on national media, and I'd like to have Jones ask Trump the questions that we all want asked. | ||
If we're going to back this person, he can't be a coward when we want to talk to him, when we want a response from the administration. | ||
And he's treating us like stepchildren. | ||
So, and you guys, no offense, but it seems as if you've accepted this role. | ||
And I don't think you should. | ||
I think you should push for more coverage, more exposure, more Trump on your show so that we have a better idea. | ||
Because then we can't make excuses that he didn't know. | ||
Because I'm so tired of hearing the right say Trump was tricked, Trump didn't know. | ||
And that seems to be the globalist excuse machine that they're using, right? | ||
We're just getting stuck in the machine even further. | ||
And all we're going to say is Trump didn't know and Trump was tricked. | ||
So let's get a conversation going with the leader of the free world, Alex Jones and Donald Trump. | ||
I think that's a great idea. | ||
How do you think we should go about that? | ||
I mean, when Alex and Elon did the Twitter spaces during the campaign, that was like the biggest media event of the year, and yet they never did it again. | ||
And of course, now Elon has had the falling out with Trump. | ||
So, you know, that's probably not going to happen anytime soon. | ||
But I don't know why Trump didn't do more of that. | ||
Why every week he's not doing Twitter spaces and just bringing random people up and letting them talk. | ||
I mean, he has such a good opportunity with the way that he uses Twitter to communicate directly with his constituents. | ||
I'm as upset as you are, Tim, that he doesn't do it. | ||
And of course, InfoWars has done more to get him elected than anybody else. | ||
And we've paid the price more than anybody else. | ||
We've been punished more than anybody else for our support. | ||
And yet, you know, good luck getting a call back. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
You got any advice, Tim? | ||
How do we do? | ||
Should we start a petition? | ||
How do we get Trump on? | ||
Because I'm with you. | ||
Yeah, I think everybody should be tweeting at Trump. | ||
I think people should be doing shows. | ||
It's going to take about a week and a half to two weeks for the conversation to get towards this desk. | ||
But, you know, if people actually were serious about making America great again instead of just like, well, we're going to find out what happens tomorrow, I guess. | ||
If we want the reality of control and a little bit of preemptive thought into this, then we should definitely make the efforts to get Trump on our side versus the establishment side because he is the establishment president. | ||
He's not the make America great again president. | ||
He's just not right now. | ||
So I think a public pressure campaign would be fantastic. | ||
People need to make videos, shows, call the White House. | ||
Jones literally should be at the White House bullhorning Trump. | ||
That's an idea. | ||
I like that idea a lot. | ||
I think that'd be great. | ||
And, you know, it's funny because even if he is an establishment guy, even if he's gone totally over to the establishment, which obviously we've been very disappointed so far, I mean, you know, he's done a lot of great things. | ||
I don't want to be, you know, I don't want to brush off the things that he has done. | ||
I mean, when you look at the comparison of the border crossings, it's, you know, really astonishing. | ||
So, you know, I'm not just saying he is George W. Bush reincarnated, but if he was just a totally establishment person, wouldn't that be even more reason for him to at least talk to his audience and try to, you know, explain what's happening? | ||
Just because I'm thinking, you know, we're all out here just going, what the heck are you doing, Trump? | ||
You know, where's the seriousness? | ||
Where's the Epstein list? | ||
Where's all this stuff? | ||
If he at least came out and said, hey, guys, we're working on it. | ||
This is complicated, but here's what I'm doing and here's my strategy, then it would at least give us some breath. | ||
We'd be able to go, all right, we'll give you a little longer. | ||
So it's weird that he's not doing that because it's only making his critics more empowered and more able to question this stuff. | ||
So it's like, even if he was just doing it cynically to pull people along a little further and trick us a little bit. | ||
Maybe like Ted Cruz and Tucker Carlson? | ||
Man, Trump on Tucker Carlson would be very good. | ||
It'd be better to go on Alex. | ||
Ted Cruz got exposed on Tucker pretty well. | ||
Maybe Trump is afraid that he's going to be exposed like that. | ||
I don't know, but it's something that America has to go through. | ||
Well, I love the idea, Tim, and I completely agree with you, and I share your frustrations. | ||
Thank you so much for the call. | ||
I do want to go to Will and Mekon, I think. | ||
Mekon, something like that. | ||
I've seen these videos. | ||
Maybe the crew can pull these videos up. | ||
Will, tell us about these weird videos with Alexa that people have been posting. | ||
Yeah, Harrison, hi. | ||
It's Will and Mechwan. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
At first, I saw like one or two of them. | ||
I was like, oh, whatever. | ||
But now I've been starting to see compilations where like kids will hear Alexa or Google voice assistant or the voice assistants in general. | ||
And they'll just like immediately bow down to the noise and cower. | ||
And I was like, wow, this is like pre-programming for the AI future, you know, maybe in like 2033 or whatever. | ||
Yeah, no, it's free. | ||
I'm not sure what this video is. | ||
I don't think this is the right video, guys. | ||
There are compilations where there's kids like playing, there's like dancing or whatever, and the parents say, hey, Alexa, or hey, Google. | ||
And the kids just immediately fall on their faces and like bow. | ||
It's very creepy. | ||
And it's almost, I don't know. | ||
I don't know what to think of it because it's also a very easy thing to fake, right? | ||
It's easy to just tell a kid, hey, when I say hey, Alexa, bow, and I'll film it, and it'll look creepy or something. | ||
But it is very weird. | ||
I mean, what do you think is causing that? | ||
I don't have an Alexa or a Google Home, so I can't try it with my kids. | ||
Have you tried it? | ||
Will, do you have kids? | ||
Have you put this to the test? | ||
No, I don't have kids, but it reminds me of like personally, I've noticed before that our devices, smartphones, smart TVs, computers will play stuff when you're not paying attention. | ||
Or like I walked in, came home late from work and like walked into my brother having YouTube autoplay on, and he's sleeping and it's like demonic noises. | ||
He hears me come in and just changes to something else. | ||
So I definitely think, you know, Google and these demon people would use these tools. | ||
And remember, there was that one video of that hacker hacking that kid's intercom. | ||
And like, yeah. | ||
Remember that story? | ||
And like saying creepy things and then turning up the thermostat, you know, and like, I don't want to overwhelm Pam Bonnie because, you know, she's busy with Epstein and everything in all these cases. | ||
But like, definitely that, you know, that needs to get taken care of. | ||
The NSA and hack and backdoor channels can track them down like nothing. | ||
Assassin agencies on like dark web like slayers should be taken out. | ||
I'm surprised they haven't been taken care of. | ||
You know, things like that are easy wins. | ||
What do you think, Eric? | ||
Well, you know, I'm just trying to think of, we're seeing the videos here. | ||
And, you know, again, it's, it's, it's, it is weird. | ||
I mean, kids clearly have a reaction. | ||
I wonder if it could be something like maybe these machines make a high-pitched noise that we don't hear. | ||
You know, kids can hear high-pitched things that we can't hear. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Frequency that's sort of outside the realm of conscious hearing from adults, but kids can hear it. | ||
I mean, that might explain it, but it is. | ||
But when the parents aren't around, it's like playing like things to the kids. | ||
You know, or like you look at some of the kids' shows now, all the pre-programming on that. | ||
It's pretty wild. | ||
It is very, it is very, very, very strange. | ||
It makes me want to have kids on like far away from America. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know, it's like we need to have an environment where not only is there enough money to have kids, but can we have an environment where it's like enjoyable for kids to exist? | ||
Like in Japan? | ||
You know? | ||
No, I'm sorry we can't. | ||
No, I'm sorry. | ||
That's just not possible. | ||
Apparently, for some reason, and we honestly don't know. | ||
I don't know if Trump can fix it. | ||
Hopefully Trump can fix it. | ||
We'll pray for it. | ||
We'll pray on it. | ||
Happy 4th of July, Harrison. | ||
Happy Independence Day, sir. | ||
We got time for at least one more call. | ||
We'll go to Mike. | ||
Michael in Arkansas talking about these plans for national biodefense. | ||
I know Alex covered this extensively on his show. | ||
I unfortunately was not quick off the mark on this. | ||
Go ahead, Michael. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
Hey, Harrison, how you doing? | ||
Good, thanks. | ||
Yes, I would like to talk about some of my insights that I got from reading the document myself. | ||
I first saw it whenever y'all were showing the John Bauer report, and I looked it up myself. | ||
So there's specific wording in the document that leads me to suspect that not only is there going to be a deployment somewhere on July 4th, but that there has already been a deployment for a trial run. | ||
There's a passage in there that speaks of an event in early June with multinationals. | ||
And I suspected that event was the Walmart shareholders meeting at the Associate Seek. | ||
Interesting. | ||
Well, so what's your insight on it? | ||
Just this is already this is already happening. | ||
You're already seeing evidence of this stuff going on? | ||
Well, for about the past week, my lady and I have both been feeling kind of under the weather. | ||
She actually worked at Walmart and worked during the Associates Week, and I've just been in close proximity to her. | ||
unidentified
|
We lived down the road where they did the closing ceremony. | |
All right, well, we're coming to the end of the show. | ||
I hope you're all right, though, and I hope we make it through this Independence Day without a big bio attack. | ||
Everybody have a great 4th of July, and I will talk to you soon. | ||
unidentified
|
While other networks lie to you about what's happening now, InfoWords tells you the truth about what's happening next. | |
InfoWords.com InfoWorks. | ||
4th of July blow-up sale. | ||
It's next week only. | ||
Starting at midnight, June 30th, until 11.55 p.m. on July 6th. | ||
They're doing supplements. | ||
One, three. | ||
That's everything in the store. | ||
My ultimate buy four is the very best. | ||
Spike protein detox. | ||
So good for your cardiovascular system, your blood, your heart, everybody should be on this. | ||
Plus, the same deal for all apparel. | ||
And I can tell you, these shirts are high quality, made in America, great fabric. | ||
The average shirt, especially if it's an extra large XXL, costs like $15, $16 a piece, selling for $30. | ||
You do this. | ||
This is a lost leave. | ||
This is crazy. | ||
You get a ball cap, t-shirt, sweater, hoodie. | ||
Even though it's the summer, you want to get these out with this great discount for the fall and winter coming up. | ||
Buy one of any apparel, get another free. | ||
Did you hear that? | ||
Never done that. | ||
That is just crazy. | ||
I'm actually kind of upset. | ||
It's so good because we've got to make some money. | ||
Buy one shirt, get one free. | ||
Buy one hat, get one free. | ||
Buy one hoodie, get one free. | ||
This is our thank you to you and people that have been on the fence that love great deals. | ||
This is a great deal. | ||
Declare independence from the new world order by getting great supplements for your mind and body, great apparel to celebrate patriotism and spread the word, and by keeping InfoWars fighting for humanity by supporting us at thealishoustore.com. | ||
That is the hands down biggest best sale, not just for the alexo store.com, but the history of InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Absolutely amazing. | ||
It's running for one week. | ||
Starts now. | ||
Take advantage of it. | ||
Wow. | ||
Absolutely amazing. |