Speaker | Time | Text |
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Talking about all sorts of things, especially pertaining to cloud seeding and weather modification. | ||
But we'll get into more details about that later. | ||
Every day is a crazy news day, a crazy news cycle, and since yesterday, we've had some wild developments. | ||
President Trump has responded to the criminal investigation into James Comey and John Brennan, specifically pertaining to their roles in the Russia collusion hoax and the fraud associated with that in 2016, despite their many other crimes. | ||
That's the one that is the primary catalyst for this new criminal investigation. | ||
We've got six Secret Service agents connected to Trump, Butler assassination attempt suspended, and Brennan even responding to this. | ||
And just a flash in the pan is the CEO of X has resigned in shame immediately after Grok went haywire for a couple hours, posting all sorts of explicitly, literally Nazi propaganda. | ||
It was hilarious what Grok was doing, but it seems like the entire political, cultural, magnetic field is shifting. | ||
I know that some scientists are concerned about the magnetic poles shifting on the Earth. | ||
It's happening fairly rapidly. | ||
It does sometimes, and people wonder if it's just going to disrupt everything, all of our electronics, all of our technology. | ||
Is it going to cause massive chaos? | ||
Well, we're seeing that happen right now in the metaphysical realm rather than just the physical realm with what's taking place right before our eyes politically, domestically, and abroad. | ||
Now, I know that Donald Trump has accomplished some incredible things. | ||
He has stopped the bleeding at the border. | ||
He has stopped the invasion of the United States. | ||
I know that he's done some incredible things for working class Americans in the way of ensuring that their taxes remain low, that they have all sorts of credit and benefits. | ||
They have children. | ||
There's investment accounts you can open up now, all sorts of protections for working class Americans that the leftists wanted to eradicate as soon as possible, claiming it was financially irresponsible for us to have such tax cuts. | ||
Despite the fact that every one of their decisions pertaining to our national budget every single year for decades has been the definition of incredibly irresponsible. | ||
And I believe in Donald Trump and I believe his intentions are good. | ||
I'm just concerned that he's having to make compromises with forces that no one should ever negotiate with or compromise with. | ||
And I've said for a long time, even before Trump was elected, that those who compromise become compromised themselves. | ||
And you can see it in Dan Bongino's face, the amount of stress that he's experiencing trying to run an organization that's inherently corrupt. | ||
You can tell, based on everything that's played out over the last seven days, that now all of our hope and expectations and wishes for this administration are meeting the harsh realities of how bad things really are. | ||
In fact, they're so bad and so corrupt that our own political leaders don't feel like they can tell you what's actually going on. | ||
Because one thing I know for sure is that these Epstein files aren't being disclosed to the American people because they don't exist. | ||
They're not being disclosed to the American people because for some reason, and you can use speculation and get, I think, the right idea, for some reason, the Trump administration has determined that the harm of telling you what's really going on is greater than the harm of humiliating themselves and embarrassing themselves and letting us all down and causing a massive amount of doubt, crippling doubt here within our own movement. | ||
So I still leave my hope in Donald Trump intact. | ||
But now I'm beginning to realize the extent of the power of the enemy. | ||
And I use that term the enemy very broadly because the enemy, the adversary, Satan, takes many different forms, wears many different masks, has many different faces, and operates in the shadows in a way that you can never really see what he's doing, how he's doing it, when he's going to do it, why he's doing it. | ||
And every once in a while, you get this brief glimpse of this behemoth of a monster like a Balrog from Lord of the Rings. | ||
And you think, oh my gosh, it was that powerful all along? | ||
We've been living in such dangerous times and such dangerous proximity to evil this whole time. | ||
And now we're beginning to see the pushback on the front lines. | ||
But I want to show you clip 42. | ||
This is President Trump responding to criminal investigation into James Comey and John Brennan, saying that they're very dishonest people, which is true, crooked as hell, which is true, and maybe they have to pay the price for that. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
Hey, President Trump. | ||
James Comey and John Brennan, now under criminal investigation related to the Trump-Russia probe. | ||
Do you want to see these two guys behind bars? | ||
Well, I know nothing about it other than what I read today, but I will tell you, I think they're very dishonest people. | ||
I think they're crooked as hell. | ||
And maybe they have to pay a price for that. | ||
I believe they are truly bad people and dishonest people. | ||
So whatever happens, happens. | ||
Well, he's absolutely right about that. | ||
I mean, dishonest is, to say the least. | ||
Brennan, of course, heading up the CIA. | ||
Come in, of course, heading up the FBI. | ||
And the list of things that they've Done that are evil or wrong or corrupt or just blatantly an affront or an assault on the interests of the American people, the rights of the American people, is so great that none of them can be identified or associated with any really one thing. | ||
You know, people associate O.J. Simpson with one very specific thing. | ||
Because he did one really bad thing, one really obviously bad thing. | ||
People associate Hitler with one kind of bad thing. | ||
Most of the time, someone's legacy is either the best thing they did or the worst thing they ever did. | ||
But with Comey and Brennan, they suck so badly all the time. | ||
They're so terrible all the time that when you think of them, you just have this emotional, visceral response of disgust without even being able to immediately choose what item that they have done in their life is the primary source of the disgust. | ||
Am I disgusted with James Comey because within three months of being appointed the director of the FBI, he launched a human intelligence operation on Infowars that's still ongoing to this day, as far as we know? | ||
Is that what it is or is it something else? | ||
Am I disgusted with James Comey because of his atrocious handling of the Hillary Clinton emails saying that crimes were committed, but they weren't going to prosecute anyway? | ||
Or am I disgusted with James Comey because he acted like he came across shells on the beach that called for the assassination of the president and then claimed that he didn't know that that was a metaphor or a cryptic message to assassinate the president, even though he's the director of the FBI? | ||
Or is it the fact that he wrote a fictional novel about an intelligence community trying to fight domestic white extremism? | ||
And in that novel, he framed the primary antagonist as a exaggerated clone of Alex Jones. | ||
I can't decide. | ||
I guess you just have to add them all together, mix all of his sins and just BS together into one giant melting pot. | ||
And that's the new definition of what it means to be the melting pot in the United States of America. | ||
We used to have people from all over the world come into the United States of America legally, assimilate to our culture and melt in. | ||
That was the melting pot. | ||
We all kind of became one thing that was uniquely its own thing, the American culture. | ||
Then people stopped melting. | ||
They just kept coming here and refusing to assimilate to our values or our culture or our principles. | ||
They would come over here and just criticize everything that made this country great, abandon all faith in it, and then do everything they can at every turn to undermine the integrity of the institutions that set us up for astounding innovation and advancement. | ||
So there's no melting pot there anymore. | ||
But now that I'm looking at the sins of the Brennans and the James Comeys and the Epsteins and the intelligence agencies and the DOJs, all these institutions, which were supposed to be designed to have perfect checks and balances, so that no matter how evil or corrupt the leaders are in these institutions, there would be some integrity there to prevent the total collapse of our civilization. | ||
The new melting pot is just all of their sins into one giant vat of trash that we all have to deal with just giving off this aroma in the country formerly known as the United States of America. | ||
Now taking some new form drastically inferior. | ||
Here's John Brennan in clip 16 breaking his silence after the FBI launches a criminal probe in him, claiming the investigations are, quote, made up out of a whole cloth. | ||
Huh, I guess he would know something about that. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
As you point out, Marco Rubio, who, you know, he's a different person now, quite frankly. | ||
I think when he was in the intelligence committee, I think he really tried to carry out national security responsibilities in a very appropriate manner and tried to not just bring politics into it. | ||
So again, I think that SSCI report, the Mueller investigation, the Durham investigation and review, all of this, I think, again, validates what happened in terms of Russian interference, the conclusions of that assessment, that Russia tried to interfere to enhance Donald Trump's prospects in that election, to damage Hillary Clinton and to undermine the integrity of our election process. | ||
Those have really stood up and have been validated and supported by subsequent reviews, very thorough reviews. | ||
So again, this is something that I think is made up out of, unfortunately, whole cloth, and they're just trying to see what they're able to get to stick to the media wall and how some of these outlets are now taking this. | ||
And especially John Redcliffe's comments that he had on X and the other things, they're so inconsistent with the CIA note. | ||
He's making these allegations that just have no evidentiary basis whatsoever. | ||
And again, I think it's beneath the dignity of a CI director to just say that. | ||
You mean like the allegations made against President Trump based on documents and public letters and statements that you signed? | ||
Allegations like, oh, there's been Russian election interference and Donald Trump is an agent or asset of Russia. | ||
That was absolutely made up. | ||
And you made all those allegations. | ||
And didn't John Brennan sign the letter saying that the Hunter Biden laptop had all the hallmarks of a Russian disinformation campaign? | ||
And then didn't the CIA, under the influence of Brennan, explicitly call all of the major social media platforms, including Zuckerberg of Meta, Facebook, Instagram, and say, hey, by the way, you're about ready to see a massive Russian disinformation campaign. | ||
There's a big story that's about to break. | ||
It's totally not true. | ||
And so if you see anybody post this, please go ahead and censor it and take it down because it's just not true. | ||
An effort by the CIA, which had a tremendous impact on the outcome of the 2020 election, right? | ||
So Brennan has the audacity to sit up there, complain about the fact that he's being investigated, citing that these allegations against him are totally made up out of whole cloth. | ||
After what he did to the United States of America is exactly what he is saying is happening to him. | ||
And he cites no evidence whatsoever, just like he cited no evidence whatsoever when he said that it has all the hallmarks of a Russian disinformation campaign. | ||
I'm telling you folks, our own intelligence community, our own institutions, CIAs, FBIs, they are the greatest enemy to the people of the United States of America. | ||
I mean, when I'm trying to decide between whether or not Qatar is a greater threat to the United States of America or John Brennan and the CIA, I think it's abundantly obvious which one's a greater threat. | ||
When I'm trying to decide between whether I should be worried about Vladimir Putin, 3,000, 4,000, 5,000 miles away, or worried about the FBI with an office in every major city in the United States of America, I think the answer is very obvious that the FBI is a greater threat to national security here in the United States of America than even the most heinous and ruthless of dictators existing in the world today, despite however many nuclear weapons that they have that they could use at any moment's notice. | ||
And it's becoming clearer and clearer. | ||
I'm not trying to sound bitter or negative here. | ||
It's becoming clearer and clearer that no matter who is in leadership of these institutions or of the White House or of the House of Representatives or of the Senate, even if we had perfect clones of all of the founding fathers and we replaced all of the leaders of all of these organizations with just duplicate founding fathers, resurrected, caught up to the times, informed on what's going on. | ||
Now you're in control. | ||
I think these institutions are so inherently corrupt, evil, and dangerous that not even our own founding fathers could reverse them. | ||
So we need to get into the mindset of not who should be doing what and who needs to be replaced. | ||
Get away from that mindset, that antiquated approach to politics, which has accomplished nothing for us other than varying degrees of the rate at which we are eroding. | ||
And we need to start thinking about abolishing institutions. | ||
And I don't know how to do it. | ||
I'm not an advocate for terrorism or violence. | ||
I'm not going to go down that path. | ||
And I don't know what form of civil disobedience we can exercise to accomplish some unlikely outcome for the better like the civil rights movement was able to do with sit-ins and things of that nature. | ||
I don't know what the solution is, but I'm very rapidly arriving at a point where in no way, shape, or form do I want to be associated with anyone, no matter how honest they are, who works for these institutions. | ||
In no way, shape, or form do I want to speak to them, interact with them, fund them, expand them. | ||
I don't even want to pay taxes anymore. | ||
I swear to you, the only reason I pay taxes is because my wife would kill me if I didn't. | ||
But I honestly feel really bad about it. | ||
I feel really bad giving my money to these people. | ||
And now that I'm an employee, not a small business owner, it's a little easier because they automatically withhold my money. | ||
So I don't actually have to write them a check like I used to. | ||
But yeah, I've officially arrived at a point where I think the most dangerous, evil, worst thing you can do is write a check in any capacity to this federal government. | ||
And any chance you have to keep money from them is a step in the right direction. | ||
And I'm not trying to be blackbuilding here. | ||
I'm somebody who has hope. | ||
I have hope, but my degree of anger is now outpacing and expanding and greater than my capacity to do something about it. | ||
And that's just an incredibly helpless feeling. | ||
And I don't like feeling helpless at all. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
So we're coming up on a break in about five minutes. | ||
Let's unpack a little bit of this. | ||
Linda Yaccarino suddenly announcing that she's leaving the company. | ||
Obviously, a couple of days ago, Grock went Nazi. | ||
It was hilarious. | ||
They shut down Grock. | ||
They corrected the issue. | ||
A day later, Linda resigns. | ||
She posts a very professional message about how grateful she is for her time at X and she learned so much and yada, yada, yada. | ||
Elon Musk responds with a very short, kind of curt, but polite, professional response. | ||
unidentified
|
And look back at her. | |
She was hired on at X to bring in advertisers as they were all boycotting X because they hated free speech so much. | ||
And there were a lot of concerns about her because of her former association with the World Economic Forum, some comments that she'd made in favor of, at least implicitly, things like diversity, equity, and inclusion. | ||
And just kind of the BS corporate, politically suave vibe that she had. | ||
But she's gone now. | ||
Question is, who's going to be next? | ||
Because if she was fired for what Grock did, that means that they're going to hire somebody next who's never going to let that happen again. | ||
And I got some concerns about that. | ||
But I want to show you clip 53. | ||
I believe it's clip 53. | ||
Yeah, 5.3. | ||
This is Linda years ago, this flashback video giving all sorts of WEF vibes. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
If you think about it, I think it was the CEO of BlackRock three years ago. | |
So before the pandemic, before the awful social crisis, and he talked about calling CEOs to attention, right, all over the world, that companies in the private sector had a bigger responsibility to both their Employees and their customers to fulfill a gap in society that it was once assumed that the government would provide for people. | ||
So it was a call, you use the word to service, I would say it was also called to purpose, right? | ||
So we had a responsibility to impact culture for the good. | ||
And the bottom line is when you have those priorities and values as a company, it's good for business. | ||
unidentified
|
It inspires your employee population to want to be proud. | |
They're proud to work at your so that's just one kind of red flag piece, some rhetoric that I'm not really very comfortable with. | ||
Seems harmless on the surface, but then you see it over and over again for years and what it does to companies and where that leads and what it really means. | ||
And then you can just catch it. | ||
You just understand when you see that kind of thing. | ||
And it's followed by this clip of Linda 48 talking about their immediate activation of emergency protocol within six months of her taking over as the leader of ACTS in response to the October 7th attacks on Israel. | ||
Let's watch 48. | ||
Six months at the company. | ||
It was the first global happening where we had to activate a crisis protocol at the company. | ||
And it was a time where we all came together as a new company and realized how consequential it became to combat anti-Semitism on the platform. | ||
And that things we were doing, things we had to newly do, learn, work with law enforcement all over the world, work with military all over the world, work with a variety of organizations to protect Jewish people on that awful day, we learned how important it was for X to set the example for many to follow. | ||
So that was a really big deal. | ||
But I'll tell you what I really hate. | ||
I really hate major corporations and WEF hacks like that saying how important it is to combat anti-Semitism. | ||
Because what that really means is we decide what's anti-Semitic and what isn't. | ||
And we weaponize all of our powers to censor free speech and freedom of thought. | ||
You really want to combat anti-Semitism, then let the anti-Semitics be anti-Semitic and express it. | ||
The tighter you squeeze, the more systems slip between your fingers. | ||
Folks, we're coming up on a break here in 14 seconds. | ||
More news and analysis on the other side of this short break. | ||
In the meantime, please go to the AlexJonesStore.com and be the reason that we are still on the air. | ||
Welcome back to the American a.m. | ||
unidentified
|
You're in Austin, Texas. | |
Where I am surrounded by enemies of America and fentanyl-induced homelessness and obesity and ignorance and leftism and radicalization and indoctrination every single day. | ||
And I met with it in every single moment, every single day that it's gotten to the point where it's saturated the way that people drive. | ||
I like Texas a lot and I hate California a lot. | ||
I'll tell you what, the people in California knew how to drive. | ||
And I don't know if anybody else is experiencing this. | ||
Maybe I'm just, maybe I just got a negative attitude. | ||
But does it feel like everything is collapsing slowly around all of us? | ||
Does it feel like every single facet of civilization is just worse than it used to be? | ||
And I'm not like a negative guy. | ||
I'm not one of those guys that's like, oh, this next generation. | ||
You go back and read Socrates. | ||
I think it was in The Republic, Plato's Republic. | ||
And Socrates was complaining about how the next generation didn't know what it was doing. | ||
And the kids these days didn't respect their elders and they had no sense of discipline. | ||
Socrates was saying all the stuff that the boomers say about the millennials and that the millennials say about the Gen Zers. | ||
This has been a motif, like part of the human condition forever that everybody thinks the next generation is worse than they are. | ||
And it's maybe true sometimes, maybe not. | ||
I mean, the tide ebbs and flows in every 24 hours and the times change. | ||
But I'm looking around and I'm not even worried about the next generation. | ||
I'm worried about everyone now and how abundantly, ridiculously, overwhelmingly stupid they are all the time, always, no matter what it is that they're doing. | ||
And I can't figure out what's going on. | ||
Is there some disease infecting us that's in the air? | ||
We haven't identified it yet. | ||
And then a thousand years from now, some advanced civilization will talk about how the Homo sapien disappeared in a much similar fashion to the Homo erectus. | ||
A massive disease swept through it, reducing its IQ steadily over the course of generation after generation. | ||
Until the last words of the president of the United States were, welcome to Costco. | ||
I love you. | ||
I think it's going to be okay. | ||
I think that we'll rally, right? | ||
We're going to rally. | ||
We're going to take this country back. | ||
We're going to make America great again. | ||
We're going to put a really awesome director of the FBI and the FBI and they're going to fix everything and they're going to make it so that it can never be bad again. | ||
And then we're going to have a new leader of the CIA. | ||
That'd be great. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, we've got the White House now. | ||
We've got the House of Representatives now. | ||
We've got the Senate now. | ||
And we've got all the major institutions now. | ||
Apparently, supposedly we have them all. | ||
But we still got Lindsey Graham up there just calling for boots on the ground. | ||
unidentified
|
And I'm going to work on my attitude. | |
Because you invest so Much time and effort and hope into that one shot. | ||
And as an American, we inherently believe something that I don't think many of us are aware of that's incredibly powerful and incredibly special. | ||
Most of us, if not all of us at one point in time, but many of us still inherently believe that if you go all in on the right thing, on a Hail Mary with all of your effort, that it might not work out the way that you thought it would, but it will work out in an amazing way that you didn't expect. | ||
That's the beauty of American culture. | ||
It's stamp on humanity's history. | ||
And it's a very Christian notion. | ||
Jesus said, if you have faith the size of a mustard seed, you can move mountains. | ||
That's what that means. | ||
If you just have a little bit of faith in yourself or your vision or your idea or your passion, then that's enough for you to do the things consistently necessary to move mountains, to totally change the course of your life, how it plays out and who you become. | ||
Of course, Jesus was talking about faith in God and him, but it applies to multiple things. | ||
That's the beauty of the text. | ||
And I did the American thing. | ||
A lot of us did these last four years when everything seemed totally helpless, when inflation was rampant, when we didn't know how we were going to pay our mortgages or our credit card bills or our debt, when we didn't know how we were going to win this election because there was no freedom of speech on the internet before Elon Musk bought Twitter. | ||
I did the American thing. | ||
I had faith the size of a mustard seed and said, you know what? | ||
I'm just going to quit running my business and I'm going to go all in on this political podcasting and just see where it goes. | ||
And it played out. | ||
It panned out. | ||
Then a couple of years out of nowhere, I was hosting Infowars shows and hanging out with Alex Jones every day and on the front lines of the Infowar. | ||
And I'm thinking to myself, all right, I had face the size of a mustard seed. | ||
I didn't know how it was going to work out. | ||
I never dreamed to work in Infowars. | ||
And here I am. | ||
And it's because I did the thing that Americans do. | ||
And then miracle after miracle after miracle happened. | ||
The hand of God descended from heaven and moved Donald Trump's head at exactly the right moment so that his face wouldn't blast off in front of everyone on national television. | ||
He never wound up going to prison for anything. | ||
We got freedom of speech back on the internet, and then we won the House, the Senate, and the executive branch in a landslide victory. | ||
It wasn't even close. | ||
And all of the evil that had been accumulating in the world under this decrepit, dementia-ridden president, Joe Biden, seemed to be rendered moot. | ||
I'm thinking to myself, face the size of a mustard seed. | ||
And then this administration comes out and says there's no Epstein client list. | ||
And it really put a little rain cloud, for lack of a better term, over my parade. | ||
And maybe I'm just blown it out of proportion. | ||
Chase, give them a chance. | ||
There's stuff going on that you don't understand. | ||
They're good people. | ||
There's definitely a noble and moral reason for covering up for all of the hundreds of people who sexually abused those thousands of children. | ||
But you can't even say that sentence with a straight face. | ||
I mean, at a certain point, you got to ask yourself, all right, if I have to do this to achieve the best possible outcome, then maybe I shouldn't even be doing anything at all. | ||
And I don't want to be like a maximalist. | ||
What's it called when you want to speed up the end of the world or the collapse? | ||
An accelerationalist. | ||
I don't want to be an accelerationalist. | ||
I like the idea of keeping things as functional and just and peaceful and awesome for as long as possible. | ||
I really, really do. | ||
But every once in a while, I experience such a doubt where I'm thinking this is looking like stage four. | ||
And do we really want to have this standard of living for the next three years? | ||
Should we just go for hospice? | ||
I'll ask the guest. | ||
We have a guest coming up at 10 o'clock this morning. | ||
A guest Esther Rico, who is adamant that his cloud seating had nothing to do with the mass flooding in Texas. | ||
And I don't know if he's right or not. | ||
He's a Teal fellow. | ||
Peter Thiel, we all know about him. | ||
A little bit of palantir here, a little bit of zero to one. | ||
Book he wrote with Blake Masters, who he funded to run for Senate, who lost. | ||
I don't know if Peter Teal's a hero or a villain. | ||
I don't even know what to believe anymore. | ||
I guess that's the state. | ||
That's the fog of war. | ||
That's the issue with the info war. | ||
But Trump has been venting his frustration with Vladimir Putin on the lack of progress in the peace process in Ukraine. | ||
He announces a new defensive weapons for Kiev initiative, floats new sanctions on Moscow. | ||
Okay, so more of the same, I guess. | ||
I guess we can't trust the Russians, which is true. | ||
We never have been able to trust the Russians. | ||
And we're giving more weapons to Ukraine, despite the fact that they're Nazis, because it's unfair what's happening to them. | ||
But nobody's actually telling us why it is that we care whether or not the Ukrainians get totally destroyed. | ||
And there's no way you're going to convince me that it's because we have a conscience and we just don't like what's happening to innocent people. | ||
Because I'm telling you, our government doesn't have a conscience and it doesn't give a damn about what happens to innocent people. | ||
So I guess I just have to wait and see if more information comes out before I know what the hell is really going on. | ||
Why are we funding Nazis in Ukraine? | ||
Why are we covering for international pedophiles and intelligence operations that have compromised the interests of the American people? | ||
Why are we constantly in war in the Middle East? | ||
And why does no one here ever go to prison for the rest of their life before they go to hell for the rest of eternity for their corruption? | ||
And I'm not trying to be some pedantic, televangelistic, you know, judgmental, throwing the first stones type of thing here. | ||
I'm not one to throw the first stone. | ||
I understand I've got thorns in my own side. | ||
I don't cast judgment on people when they sin like normal people sin. | ||
I get it. | ||
We've all got our problems, our weaknesses, places where we fall short, but I don't sin like that. | ||
And I'm happy to throw stones at Nazi funding. | ||
I'm happy to throw stones at protecting those who sexually abuse children to the tune of thousands so they can compromise politicians at the expense of the interests and justice of millions and do so for decades without any accountability whatsoever. | ||
And there's not even any real evidence other than claims from institutions famous for lying about everything always. | ||
There's no real evidence that Jeffrey Epstein's even really dead. | ||
They showed us an 11 hour, excuse me, 10 hour and 59 minute video of a hallway. | ||
I said, see, what am I looking at here? | ||
Maybe if I consistently bang my head against a wall, I'll strike at that perfect moment where all the molecules and molecular structure and atoms are in just the right place that I fly into another dimension. | ||
And I can say, oh, thank God that's over with. | ||
The Supreme Court backs parental rights over school, LGBTQ books and classes. | ||
Just look at the thumbnail in this article overhead cam, please. | ||
We got the white prince slamming the black knight. | ||
Hey, buddy. | ||
Nice sword. | ||
Nice cape. | ||
This is always like a white dude with a POC. | ||
And that's someone else's daughter they bought. | ||
Uncle Bobby wedding. | ||
The pride puppy. | ||
Unbelievable. | ||
Oh, I can guarantee you that dog's neutered. | ||
You know what? | ||
I'm going to fire up the phone lines. | ||
I want everybody calling 877-789-2539. | ||
877-789-2539. | ||
877-789-2539. | ||
In the meantime, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene joins the war room. | ||
Steve Bannon. | ||
She's determined to strip the defense budget and prioritize U.S. interests. | ||
Good luck, Marjorie. | ||
And the Department of Homeland Security accuses medical staff at Ontario, California Surgical Center of dragging ICE agent and fleeing a legal alien off the street and into the hospital in an effort to stop deportation. | ||
Who cares? | ||
Woman arrested outside Mar-a-Lago claiming she had an urgent message for President Trump, told agents she had weapons in the car. | ||
Another MK Ultra operative who failed at their mission because the CIA is so incompetent now, it can't even weaponize insane assassins to kill presidents or world leaders or celebrities or musicians like John Lennon. | ||
And we've covered the six Secret Service agents who are now suspended a year later. | ||
Why is justice always postponed? | ||
Why is the right thing always postponed? | ||
It seems so easy to solve some of these problems. | ||
Another massive Epstein bombshell, by the way, because this came out just late last night. | ||
Media narrative destroyed Epstein's body confirmed in his room on upper level L tier where he was killed, not the lower level floor shown in the video. | ||
I don't even know what to think when I see stuff like this. | ||
Because, again, we've been inundated with so much information that you can't know it's true. | ||
That's the objective, I guess, in the information war is just to create this fog of war. | ||
But hey, the African presidents say Trump deserves the Nobel Peace Prize for securing peace between Rwanda and the Congo and working to secure peace around the world. | ||
And frankly, I think the Nobel Peace Prize, I like Trump and I like his peace. | ||
He's more peaceful than any president we've had in a long time. | ||
But I think the Nobel Peace Prize can go straight to hell. | ||
All of these awards and these prizes are purely political. | ||
They gave it to Barack Obama. | ||
Nobel won it for discovering dynamite, which was used for decades in war to blow the hell out of cities. | ||
So I guess it's fitting then that Bib Net and Yahoo would nominate Donald Trump for a Nobel Prize, given that it started with the guy that made dynamite. | ||
And BB Net and Yahoo did destroy 70 to 80% of all the buildings in the Gaza Strip, which I'm sure he killed all the terrorists, most of them. | ||
Anyone who's alive there still now is certainly converting to a terrorist because of what happened in their community. | ||
And I'm no friend of Islam and their cousin marriage and their inbred crap and their standard deviation lower of IQs and their pedophile worship. | ||
But when I'm looking at Islam and the fact that it prays to a pedophile, insisting that there was no client list for that pedophile, and then I'm on the other hand, supporting a Trump administration that protects Jeffrey Epstein, I'm starting to think, what's the difference between what Trump did with this whole Epstein stuff and what the Muslims have been saying about Muhammad for the last thousand years? | ||
It's just protecting pedophiles all the time. | ||
United States of Islam. | ||
Gosh. | ||
Maybe I didn't get enough sleep last night. | ||
Maybe I'm just in a, maybe I just woke up on the wrong side of the bed. | ||
And there'll be incredible bipartisan support for awesome legislation and a lot of reaching across the aisle for the circle jerk that happens amongst our political class. | ||
Biden's doctor refuses to testify. | ||
Yeah, we'll shovel up 58 in here. | ||
It is 58 in a second. | ||
Biden's doctor refuses to testify on Joe Biden's health decline, pleads a fifth. | ||
Comer responds. | ||
Let's watch 58. | ||
unidentified
|
News right now from a hearing behind closed doors in D.C., President Biden's former physician refusing to answer questions during a House deposition. | |
James Comer, help leading that hearing, said the following, the American people demand transparency, but Dr. O'Connor would rather conceal the truth. | ||
End quote. | ||
He cited doctor patient confidentiality. | ||
They were trying to give him a way around that, but wasn't budget apparently today. | ||
So we'll see how far it goes. | ||
Doctor patient confidentiality. | ||
For a man who was the President of the United States at a time where we had to show our vaccination cards to enter certain institutions. | ||
Proof of vaccination. | ||
In fact, there's a doctor right now, 58 years old in Utah, facing 35 years in prison for falsifying such vaccination cards to protect his patients from the regulations that would have forced them to be inoculated with this poison. | ||
And now we have Joe Biden's doctor coming out and saying, oh, it's a violation of my patients' health privacy for me to testify here to what you all already know. | ||
And that's what's so weird, man, about where we are. | ||
We all know what's really going on, but it doesn't matter that we all know it until very specific parties or individuals admit that it's true. | ||
Isn't that bizarre? | ||
It's like in the fall of the Soviet Union. | ||
It's a concept called, I think, false preference bias. | ||
In the Soviet Union, early on, everybody would put signs in their storefronts that said, workers of the world unite. | ||
It was about the expansion of communism and the workers rising up against the evil capitalists and the proletariat standing up against the bourgeois. | ||
Workers of the world unite was the slogan. | ||
Then, of course, it became law to have that sign in the front of your business. | ||
And after a couple decades go by, everybody living in the Soviet Union or even the CCP during the Great Leap War, but specifically the Soviet Union, knew unequivocally, without a doubt, that communism was not working, that there were massive shortages, that there was massive starvation taking place, particularly in Ukraine. | ||
They knew that it wasn't working, but everybody had to keep the sign up in front of their shop that said workers of the world unite. | ||
So it was a false preference bias. | ||
Everybody thought that everybody else thought that communism was great and the workers of the world should unite, but nobody was talking about it. | ||
And it worked and it sustained a civilization and a philosophy that no one actually believed in whatsoever because everyone simply believed that everyone else believed it. | ||
And so they were playing along as if they were the only ones that harbored the knowledge of what was true. | ||
That's false preference bias. | ||
Now we're in a situation where everybody knows who, what, and why regarding everything Epstein, but it doesn't matter that we all know that he was operating on behalf of Mossad and the CIA and MI6 to blackmail and leverage our own politicians using the abuse of children as the leverage to accomplish this end. | ||
We all know that's what happened. | ||
But it doesn't matter because those institutions or those specific leaders won't publicly come out and admit it. | ||
They can lie to us bold face and it's enough to sustain the system that has resulted in us arriving at this place. | ||
And maybe the problem is that we are trying to pressure evil people and institutions to do the right thing when what we need to be doing is rendering evil individuals and institutions powerless. | ||
It doesn't matter what they do because it has no impact. | ||
We need to eradicate these people from all the halls of our institutions. | ||
We need to eradicate these institutions from all of our communities. | ||
And at this point in time, man, I really hope Elon Musk accomplishes terraforming Mars and getting people on Mars in a self-sustaining way so that humanity 200 years from now can find somewhere further west to go to get away from the shithole that this country will become. | ||
And I'm just trying to slow the bleeding long enough so maybe my children don't have to see the collapse happen. | ||
Maybe we can delay it another 100 years. | ||
Maybe we can just expand the debt ceiling one more time, kick the can and prevent collapse and pass the ticking time bomb on to the next generation. | ||
As we read headlines like, here we go again, new Superman movie drops the American Way from Heroes iconic catchphrase, more gay. | ||
Comey and his wife tailed by law enforcement in unmarked cars in plain clothes following Trump assassination Instagram post. | ||
Oh, you mean like everybody that works at Infowars since December 10th of 2013, thanks to James Comey under the Type 3 assessment, which allows everybody that works here to be followed by the government and undercover unmarked vehicles? | ||
I have no sympathy for these people. | ||
I mean, look at Chelsea Clinton. | ||
She's looking at you. | ||
She just wants to take a bite out of your soul. | ||
She could eat an apple through a picket fence. | ||
Does she have an underbite? | ||
God, she looks like that pedophile dude. | ||
What was his name? | ||
Was he coming around in the MAGA movement all the time? | ||
He looks like the donkey from Emperor's New Groove. | ||
What's that guy's name? | ||
Ali Alexander? | ||
Is that what I'm talking about? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
She kind of looks like him. | ||
Texans furious as Chelsea Clinton announces Clinton Global Initiative. | ||
Volunteers are on the ground following devastating floods. | ||
Oh, I'd be mad too. | ||
You know what would be really funny? | ||
What would be really funny is instead of deporting all of the Haitians that came illegally into the United States, we enacted a policy whereby they could stay in the United States, but we just had to move them to the community that was most recently destroyed by a massive flood. | ||
It'd be called the Just Like Home campaign, where you're here, but you're still right at home. | ||
And you can't destroy a community if it's already destroyed. | ||
So it's really kind of a win-win for everybody. | ||
All right, folks, we're coming up on a break here in two minutes and eight seconds. | ||
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And I am rapidly losing faith in every institution that I used to really lean on. | ||
Every value I used to place hope in and every individual that I used to count on. | ||
But I have yet to lose faith in Infowars in this audience and our products at thealxjonstore.com. | ||
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The catastrophic floods that tore through the Texas Hill Country from the 4th of July into the 5th have claimed at least 82 lives, including 68 in Kerr County alone, with 27 deaths at Camp Mystic and approximately 41 people, including 10 girls and one counselor from the camp, remain missing. | ||
The disaster has prompted extensive rescue efforts with over 850 people saved through air, ground, and water operations. | ||
Lake Travis, the massive flood control reservoir, took on a staggering 86 billion gallons of water in just 24 hours and is now just 30 feet from full capacity. | ||
Just two days before this biblical deluge, Augustus DeRico, a 25-year-old tech bro and teal fellow, was reportedly cloud seeding over Texas with his weather-modifying startup, Rainmaker. | ||
DeRico played God with the skies and Texans' lives. | ||
My name is Augustus DeRico. | ||
I'm the CEO and founder of Rainmaker. | ||
We're a cloud seeding company that is enhancing precipitation via advanced radar and also drones for the sake of supplementing water supplies for farms, cities, reservoirs, and wildlife throughout the United States. | ||
Cloud seeding is conventionally done with a chemical called silver iodide. | ||
It's LD50, so its lethal dose is 10 times higher than aspirin. | ||
And we're using about 50 grams per each operation. | ||
That's as much as can fit in the palm of your hand, right? | ||
That's less flour than is in a slice of bread. | ||
So the amount that accumulates into watersheds is in the parts per trillion after decades of operation. | ||
And we have data to prove that from programs that exist throughout the United States. | ||
You know, so Colorado and California, Texas and Idaho, they all have weather modification programs that the state funds. | ||
How long have they had those programs? | ||
So cloud seeding was invented in the United States. | ||
It's an American technology that was done for the first time in New York in 1946. | ||
So the very first effective weather modification operations were done in the 40s after World War II. | ||
Then there have been a series of programs that have popped up either domestically or abroad in the decades in between. | ||
But we've never actually been able to prove that it works until 2017. | ||
Why is Teal's money funding private weather experiments? | ||
Why is a kid with zero oversight manipulating Texas weather? | ||
They call it stewarding nature, but Texas got a catastrophic flood that killed dozens, swept away homes, and left Camp Mystic horrendously ravaged. | ||
There are currently 42 cloud seeding projects across the American West, like this one in Utah, where they take planes like this with flares attached. | ||
They fly right into the storm and send microscopic particles into the cloud. | ||
Particles that act like magnets for water droplets, bonding together until they are heavy enough to fall to the ground as rain or snow. | ||
unidentified
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In 2017, the UAE performed 242 cloud seating operations. | |
The government is confident the operations are increasing the amount of rainfall, but it's difficult to gauge. | ||
Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene introduced a bill to ban weather control and geoengineering, making it a felony to inject chemicals to alter weather, temperature, or sunlight. | ||
Over 30 states have passed or are pushing laws to restrict these shady practices in the last year, with Tennessee banning geoengineering outright in 2024. | ||
While Health and Human Services head Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is also on the war path investigating DARPA for allegedly running secret weather control ops across North America. | ||
unidentified
|
Bromium, aluminum, strontium, it's sprayed in our skies all day long. | |
And I know you've talked to Dane Wiggington about this. | ||
He seems to be one of the experts in the field. | ||
unidentified
|
Is your question? | |
Yes. | ||
How do we stop it? | ||
It's done, we think, by DARPA. | ||
And a lot of it now is coming out of the jet fuel. | ||
So, you know, those materials are put in jet fuel. | ||
I'm going to do everything in my power to stop it. | ||
This trend of devastation has targeted smart city-planned areas across the nation, from Maui to the Pacific Palisades to Kerrville itself. | ||
The American people deserve answers, not chemtrails and cover-ups. | ||
And as the skies clear, it becomes abundantly obvious this storm is far from over. | ||
John Bowne reporting for InfoWars. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, I'm Chase Kaiser, and we have breaking news from the front lines of the golden age of America. | ||
Moderna gets full U.S. approval for COVID shot and At-risk children six months or older. | ||
Things are getting so much better. | ||
I'm going straight to calls. | ||
Albert and Austin. | ||
Albert, I want to hear from you. | ||
What is on your mind? | ||
Hey, so I'm looking at what's going on, and it's like that off-ramp meme where the car is heading down the highway, barreling down the highway, and then suddenly you see this off-ramp, and it feels like that's where you guys are, where MAGA is. | ||
And you've got this off-ramp that Donald Trump has finally presented you with. | ||
And it's going to be interesting to see who takes it. | ||
Also, the whole Ali Alexander thing. | ||
unidentified
|
You guys had Allie Alexander on the show constantly. | |
Yeah, before we knew that he was a kiddie didler. | ||
You knew it all the time. | ||
We knew it the whole time. | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
Oh, if we knew it the whole time, then why am I talking crap about him right now? | ||
Unsolicited for no reason. | ||
Didn't know that he was a kiddie diddler. | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
Listen, how do you find your way to knowledge? | ||
How do you find your way to the bathroom when you wake up at 2 o'clock in the morning with your head so far up your ass you can't see a damn thing? | ||
You're like Ray Charles without the talent, dude, just fumbling around like a fucking bumbling idiot. | ||
Let's go to Palos in Wisconsin. | ||
Excuse me, guys. | ||
Hi, Talos in Wisconsin. | ||
How are you doing? | ||
Hey, I'm doing really well this morning. | ||
How are you doing? | ||
Yeah, don't worry about that. | ||
Don't get your blood pressure up, waste your energy on stuff. | ||
Yeah, I want to talk about the Epstein documents. | ||
I tried to get into the other day, but couldn't. | ||
Because the phone lines are so busy. | ||
You guys are so popular now. | ||
It's hard to get in. | ||
But anyway, Harrison posted on his Twitter, I mean, X, the Maria Farmer clip. | ||
And I haven't seen you guys play that one. | ||
And that one's kind of like super incendiary and sucks. | ||
And I don't know if it's legit because like I tried Googling it and obviously trying to Google something like that is like Nightmare City. | ||
You're going to have to pardon my ignorance, man. | ||
I don't know what that clip is. | ||
Harrison put it on his ex yesterday, I believe. | ||
What is it? | ||
Or maybe the day before yesterday, but it's this victim from Epstein who said that like they were all like a Jewish supremacy group and that they would like say like really mean things against black people and were really racist against Christians and like treated, | ||
and she was like, I was treated like a dog, you know, and like, but like I was thinking that's like with every weird sex cult, this domination, weird devil stuff. | ||
And then also like with Trump involved with the F-Scene, like, I'm not, obviously I want Trump to, you know, get every bad person on the planet, but like, you know, people have been having sex with kids for all times in ancient times in different parts of the world. | ||
And I don't know how suddenly it's like Trump's problem and he needs to come in and just like stop all sex slavery and fix everything else. | ||
It's because he's the president of the United States and nobody else will do it. | ||
It's not his fault. | ||
Yeah, but it's not like a small problem to solve or an easy problem to solve. | ||
It's like, how do you stop the demand when there's all these people? | ||
I mean, nobody's going to eradicate all pedophilia, but you could prosecute the people. | ||
Nobody's making sense. | ||
I'm not saying that. | ||
And there should be like helicopter squads and like a task force going around and they probably already have it, you know. | ||
And maybe this was all just one big CIA intelligence massage op where they use it to like get leverage on people because people can, you know, get horny and then they can send some weaponized pussy and they're just like, they'll do whatever they say. | ||
Some people, they don't even need a drug. | ||
Then they hook them on drugs. | ||
Like sometimes also like midnight climax. | ||
How do we know these people weren't dosed? | ||
You know, some of the victims can say in the Diddy party like, hey, I didn't know my face from my ass. | ||
Right. | ||
You know, like that last caller. | ||
I was horny as hell. | ||
Like that last caller. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know, and I'm obviously, I'm not excusing, you know, Jeffrey Epstein. | ||
Like, I think he was eating the people. | ||
He was a cannibal. | ||
He had like a adrenochrome. | ||
I think he was a cannibal because he had the symptoms of adrenochrome and cannibalism, Kuru disease, where your teeth get all messed up. | ||
Your teeth get all messed up because like the adrenaline, adrenochrome is like super acidic. | ||
It's just like a rosy enamel. | ||
Well, it's like, yeah, yeah. | ||
And like you grind the hell out of your teeth because you're consuming so much adrenaline. | ||
Seen people at Ray, you know, like, or on cocaine, like Macron, you know, or people at festivals on ecstasy, they grind their teeth, you know, and then like, you know, the saints' blood, when they're dying and tortured, the DMT chemical is in the blood. | ||
So they have a DMT experience at the same time, which is like insanity. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
You know, like these people have their literal button, fingers on the button for nuclear war and war and are, and are managing our wallet. | ||
Like, why would you ever let a crackhead run your finances? | ||
You know, and I'm not saying, you know, what's going on now is bad, but obviously Trump, you know, is trying to get the finances in check. | ||
But, you know, he has so many problems. | ||
And, you know, they're like, it's like those when kids are going up to daddy and like asking him for everything. | ||
And, you know, he's been in there six months. | ||
I totally agree. | ||
There needs to be like helicopter squads going and smoking these guys all the time. | ||
Same with the floods in Texas. | ||
Like, I don't get how right away from some regional area, some helicopters are sent and like Russia has Americom government systems. | ||
Like that's what FEMA should be doing. | ||
But instead, they're embezzling the money and scamming it. | ||
So it's like, anyway, it's all one big mess. | ||
And I think part of that is on purpose because when it's chaos, you can like triple dip in business. | ||
You make money making the mess. | ||
You make money cleaning up the mess. | ||
You make money on the side. | ||
And I'm not some like communist or believe that you can't, like, you know, we need a little grease. | ||
There needs to be a little profit to do anything and motivation. | ||
Sure. | ||
But now it's coming to the point where it seems that like it's a champagne socialism where the world is subsidizing people like Epstein and different elite cabals from ancient times, from present times, all these different mafias. | ||
And the people as a mass just gets trampled on as the elephant fight. | ||
What do you think, Tate? | ||
Man, I think you said a lot of really incredible stuff, and I totally agree with everything you said. | ||
Where I get frustrated is we know what should be done. | ||
We just don't know how to get it done. | ||
You know? | ||
Obviously, it should be that pedophiles are prosecuted aggressively and that the punishment for their crime is overwhelming. | ||
But it's not happening, really. | ||
And how do we make it happen? | ||
That's my question for you. | ||
I think we need to have the right people in charge, you know? | ||
And Owen was talking about the administration, the Trump administration. | ||
Paulis, I just lost you. | ||
I don't know if you muted yourself. | ||
I'll try to go back to you later, but I'm going to move on to another caller. | ||
I love you. | ||
Rich in New Jersey. | ||
Rich, what's on your mind? | ||
Chase, how are you? | ||
I'm doing well. | ||
Thanks for calling. | ||
I can hear you. | ||
unidentified
|
Listen, I got to tell you, your sarcasm is hilarious. | |
I love it. | ||
Thanks, man. | ||
You're not an apologist. | ||
I love it. | ||
I'm in dirty jersey over here where we're going to our own set of hell over here, which is a microcosm of the whole country. | ||
unidentified
|
But anyway, I'm going to keep this short as much as I can. | |
Take your time. | ||
I don't care how many aliens, legal aliens, we deport. | ||
I don't care about anything that's being, and I know you want to try to be a little positive in this very horrible, negative time we're going through. | ||
unidentified
|
But I said this before Trump was elected, and I said it afterwards. | |
I said, I don't care what he does, but it doesn't mean anything if we can't show this crime list of the most degenerate, hideous crime known to human, known to the world, to the universe. | ||
I think it's, I mean, maybe it's equal with the murder, but you're murdering kids' souls. | ||
You're destroying people. | ||
unidentified
|
If this is covered up, the whole friggin thing means nothing to me. | |
I don't care. | ||
They can do all these investigations, but people, I don't understand how people need to make light of this. | ||
Oh, we got other issues going on. | ||
We got this, we got that. | ||
I'm like, do you understand? | ||
I'm telling people, my family, my friends, if they can cover up this disaster, okay? | ||
And this call and the whole thing with Epstein, then they can, how much easier can they lie about other things? | ||
I mean, am I making sense or not? | ||
I mean, really. | ||
You're absolutely making sense. | ||
The whole reason that the Epstein case is important is not just because of the kids. | ||
Of course, that's the main reason. | ||
But the reason it's important is because it's proof that there's no accountability for the political class, no matter how heinous the crimes are that they commit or how obvious it is that they committed those crimes, or even if everyone knows what they did, when they did it, and why they did it. | ||
So if the political class can engage in sexually abusing children in a systemic way on an island for decades, and then if everybody finds out about it and knows that they did it and they still face no consequences, then that means that they are literally above the law and that there is no system of justice. | ||
And if there is no system of justice, there is no civilization. | ||
There is no order. | ||
That's all a civilization is. | ||
It's order out of chaos. | ||
There's a bunch of individuals that are inherently disorganized from one another. | ||
They come together, they establish order and systems and justice, and then they function as a sum greater than the parts or a whole greater than the sum of their parts. | ||
But we've proven this week that if our justice system isn't completely dead, it is on life support. | ||
That's why everyone's frantically wanting to get this corrected, wanting to get this dealt with, because we want a civilization that is just. | ||
What do you think? | ||
We're on hospice right now. | ||
You're right. | ||
It's on life support. | ||
And this is the thing. | ||
I go through this with my family, my friends, and I'll just keep it real quick and I'll end it right here. | ||
unidentified
|
I know you got other callers. | |
The people say, well, how does it relate to us? | ||
No, it does because these are the same bastards that are telling me I'm going to get fucking arrested without a mask in a fucking store. | ||
Hey, sorry, we're on the radio, so watch your language. | ||
I know I said some bad words, but we already used all the dumps on me. | ||
Yeah, I know. | ||
I know. | ||
You got your graces. | ||
I understand. | ||
But, you know, man, I just felt like it is. | ||
These are the same people that are telling us that we got to take a vaccine. | ||
So, yes, it does affect us down to our very every single house in America. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
It's just a no-brainer. | ||
But thank you for your time, Chase. | ||
Yeah, thank you for calling. | ||
Call back anytime. | ||
I really appreciate it. | ||
Let's try. | ||
I think this is the right clip. | ||
Let's try clip 22. | ||
I want to watch this and then unpack it on the other side if it's the one I'm thinking it is. | ||
But that's not actually the biggest deal. | ||
The biggest deal is the size and scale and our ambitions as an empire. | ||
It's got to end. | ||
And that fight, folks, is about the deep state. | ||
And you can tie Epstein and Ukraine and what's happening, quite frankly, in the Middle East, right? | ||
And the Chinese Communist Party's infiltration of our nation all tied back to the deep state. | ||
It's got to come down. | ||
And we only have a couple of years to do it. | ||
And we've got to be a general quarters. | ||
This is what we have to be a DEF CON one about. | ||
And if we blink or do some side deals, right, or, you know, go after some marginal people, so you've got a couple of trophies up on the wall, that's not, This must be dismantled. | ||
It must be taken apart brick by brick. | ||
It's not going to be easy. | ||
You think, look at USAID, you think it's going to be easy to take this apart? | ||
No, it's not. | ||
You just had Sherman people saying, hey, you go ahead, play the fool, go do it. | ||
Go try it. | ||
Well, we have to do it. | ||
We have to do it. | ||
We don't have an option. | ||
The Epstein thing about whether they have it or not, it's a central front in the taking down of the deep state. | ||
It must be done. | ||
This Ukraine thing, the whole effort to get Bridge Colby and Pete Hexas out of the Pentagon right now, because they're the ones cautioning that we're getting the deep state is sucking us in, just like what happened in the 12-day war. | ||
Over the past several weeks, the Department of Education has notified the Department of Education in California, as well as the California Interscholastic Federation, that they were in violation of Title IX. | ||
They were allowing men to compete in women's sports. | ||
Now, this is after years of their being in violation of Title IX. | ||
We informed them that if they did not change, that we were going to refer these cases to the Department of Justice, and we have done exactly that. | ||
Thank you, Secretary McMahon, for all of your hard work. | ||
And today, the Department of Justice has filed a lawsuit against California Department of Education and the governing body for women's sports in California. | ||
We've made it very clear, only women in women's sports under Title IX. | ||
An example in California, a boy who was in track and field. | ||
He would have lost every race. | ||
Yet in women's sports, he won over three dozen medals. | ||
Those medals should be returned to the women, as well as no boys will be allowed in women's locker rooms. | ||
No longer. | ||
We have sued Maine. | ||
We're in litigation with Minnesota. | ||
We've sent multiple letters. | ||
And if you do not comply, you're next. | ||
The Department of Education and the Department of Justice, we will protect girls in girls' sports. | ||
So this is Pam Bondi protecting young women and children immediately after saying nothing to see here regarding Epstein. | ||
And look, I agree with the issue that she's addressing there. | ||
Definitely a weird thing going on with the gender in California and the sports. | ||
And it's not fair when men are competing in women's sports and then winning and then they're in their locker rooms. | ||
It's a vulnerable situation. | ||
But what about the blood-sucking satanic sex rituals that took place on Epstein's Island that we have tens of thousands of videos of? | ||
Then we know who was responsible for participating in that. | ||
Okay. | ||
It's just, oh my God. | ||
Matt in Spring Branch. | ||
Matt, how are things in Spring Branch? | ||
They're doing good, Chase. | ||
Man, God bless you for covering Harrison. | ||
What a week to take off. | ||
Hell of a week. | ||
You know, I'm looking at all this and this dropped on Sunday about the Epstein stuff and how it's just, let's whitewash it. | ||
Let's walk away. | ||
And I got to really thinking about it and the biblical connotations around it. | ||
And the Bible is very clear about, and I'm not going to, because I can't quote Bible in verse, but the Bible is very clear about what happens to people that cause children to sin. | ||
Very, very, very clear. | ||
And it was interesting to watch Caroline Levette take her cross off when she made those announcements. | ||
Do you think that was just coincidence or do you think that was all totally intentional because, and this is the way I'm seeing it, because now anybody that does that also becomes complicit in the act. | ||
So all of the Epstein client list, all of that, now all of the, all of our executive branch now that has knowledge about these facts, they're now complicit in the cover up. | ||
Now they are just as equally guilty of the actual motivation. | ||
They're all in the list. | ||
Yes, they're all in the club now. | ||
They're on the list now. | ||
They're on the list. | ||
And I'm thinking about this and it's just like, okay, what is God trying to tell us? | ||
You know, the weather, everything's kind of crazy, things are upside down. | ||
And I do think the next three and a half years are going to be economically very good. | ||
But me and my family, we live in a nice 10-acre spot here in Comaw County, big house. | ||
We're bailing. | ||
We're getting out of here. | ||
We're going west. | ||
We're going to pull a Wolverine style thing, get up in the hills over Rock Springs where nobody lives around us because the three and a half years that come after that ain't going to be pretty. | ||
Because I really feel for you guys, what you're going to have to confront, you, Alex, everybody, because you guys are at the forefront. | ||
You guys are the tip of the spear on all of this. | ||
And the retribution that's going to come after Trump's gone on us is going to be biblical. | ||
Because Trump has enabled this. | ||
You can't walk away from this. | ||
God demands you don't walk away from this. | ||
And they're doing it. | ||
And so you look at all their faces, how they've all changed. | ||
They're all happy. | ||
Caroline's talking about, you know, we're doing this, we're doing this, wearing a cross, wearing a cross. | ||
And then she comes out and makes that announcement about Epstein in that press conference, and you can just see it in her face. | ||
She's scared. | ||
And any person that is in that executive branch that has knowledge of those facts, knowledge of the lies and the cover-up, if they don't resign just to save their soul, they're doomed too. | ||
And so we're going to pull a little green. | ||
We're going to go off into the hills. | ||
I've got enough money. | ||
This place, I'm actually happy for your listeners, this space between Como, this space between San Antonio and Austin is really hot real estate right now. | ||
And God has blessed me more ways than one, but I have three daughters. | ||
I have a wife I have to take care of. | ||
And I'm looking at what's coming down the pipe and I'm like, okay, Matt, you've got three and a half years to get the heck out of Dodge because the scenes are going to come off of this because we are no longer a nation under God. | ||
Right now, I trust in God. | ||
I don't trust in Trump. | ||
Trump's going to give us good economic stuff, but God bless you guys for what you're doing, man. | ||
Hey, all good points, man. | ||
God bless you too. | ||
Thanks for your call. | ||
That was really insightful. | ||
I think right on the money. | ||
I think we have time for one more caller before we go to a short break and then more calls on the other side. | ||
The crew's going to keep screening them as they come in. | ||
Chad in Minnesota. | ||
Chad, what is on your mind? | ||
Good morning, Chase. | ||
Excellent job filling in this week. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
Navigating all this chaos. | ||
Wow. | ||
Well, no, our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false. | ||
Every lie is a battle in the war of the InfoWars. | ||
It's getting to the point where it's just blatantly obvious that we live in a virtual Truman show because of all the lies. | ||
And here you are, here is InfoWars, providing the public with the truth and trying to get the most information out possible to try to clear everything up. | ||
And you have all sorts of things that just, how are we to get to any truth that is, especially like people that don't spend their time doing this for a living? | ||
How are we even going to get close to it when, like you said, we have these organizations, we have these departments, the CIA and the FBI, we can't trust them. | ||
We thought maybe we would get some people in and we could turn things around. | ||
That's not happening. | ||
Now they're complicit, just like the previous caller said. | ||
And that other caller, that's rules for radicals. | ||
That other caller. | ||
Seriously, move on. | ||
Like they just hold it. | ||
I love those calls, though, because then you know the enemy's listening. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Exactly. | ||
It's just move on, though. | ||
You're still, you're part of that process and what everybody's going through. | ||
And it's this virtual Truman show. | ||
It's this where like everybody has an opinion. | ||
And that's where I think that William Casey nailed it. | ||
And he's, you know, he, I mean, that's what's going on. | ||
And it's just, and especially when you have, when you now have the, the, the actual people that you voted for are now shifting. | ||
And I, my point was to get to Ballard Partners, which are you familiar with Ballard Partners? | ||
The live? | ||
No, I am not, but we're coming up on a break in 22 seconds. | ||
If you're willing to stay on the line for this short four-minute break, I'll go right back to you and let you finish all your thoughts on their side. | ||
Is that all right? | ||
Absolutely, Chase. | ||
Cool. | ||
Thank you. | ||
In the meantime, everybody, go to the alexjonesstore.com and be the reason that we're on the air and not selling out, not paid for by anyone else, just representing the truth for its own sake, all the time. | ||
Stay with us. | ||
All right, ladies and gentlemen, I am Chase Geiser and I am back. | ||
Chad, thank you so much for staying on the line. | ||
Please get into what you were getting into and then we'll move on to other callers. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Yeah, Ballard Partners is an American lobbying firm. | ||
That's the firm that Susie Wiles, the White House chief of staff, was employed and also Pam Bondi. | ||
And just, you know, it may be nothing, but I thought it was interesting to find out that Ballard Partners actually, their client list, I found it through an open secrets site. | ||
And they had indicated there that some of the groups that have retained Ballard Partners in 2025, which probably even prior if you look at the total amount spent, ADL is one of the groups. | ||
Bear, Palantir. | ||
And I know this is out there, but it's just, it's rather interesting. | ||
And Susie Wilds also was employed with Mercury Public Affairs, which had a interesting, I think it was before her time, but it had a, there was actually a time where they were the NSO group, the Israeli cyber intelligence and security firm. | ||
Also, I guess it's under, it's a, it's a group under, well, they, they came out with Pegasus and they actually hired, they hired the Mercury public affairs group to basically cover, well, cover for them when the whole information that came out or was, you know, the spyware grade stuff through Pegasus came out. | ||
So I just thought it was rather interesting that, you know, I don't know. | ||
I mean, it just feels like it's really interesting that you're mentioning Susie Wiles because this clip has been subtly circulating of her responding to Trump's relationship with Musk and how it's devolved into this massive rift that nobody really knows what's going to play out to. | ||
But I want to play clip 52 and thank you for your call, Chad, just in line with everything you've said. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
This has been a pretty smooth presidency. | ||
But one little hiccup was Elon. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Little hiccup. | |
Little hiccup. | ||
I mean, I saw Elon Musk here very comfortable coming in and out of the Oval Office, you know, had sleepovers in the Lincoln bedroom. | ||
It seemed almost as if he had a sort of fatherly fixation with Donald Trump that I guess inevitably was going to blow up at some point. | ||
How did you see that relationship? | ||
Similar. | ||
The president was very, very kind to him. | ||
And Elon had so much to offer us. | ||
He knew things we didn't know. | ||
He knew people and technologies that we didn't know. | ||
It was a great thing when it was a great thing. | ||
And I had a very, I think, a very troublesome ending. | ||
Why do you think that happened? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't understand it. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I know that what has been said doesn't ring accurate to me, but I don't know. | ||
I enjoyed working with Elon. | ||
I think he's a fascinating person and sees the world differently. | ||
And I think that's probably what the president saw too, just a little bit different than the average Joe. | ||
But it certainly came to not a good ending. | ||
Interesting food for thought. | ||
Let's go to Inner City Rogue in Denver. | ||
Inner City Rogue, what's on your mind? | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Can you hear me okay, kid? | ||
All right, yeah, I'd just like to explain this collapse because you're not really going crazy. | ||
I mean, you are seeing this literal collapse in everything that's going on right now. | ||
This is the, I mean, it's a snowball effect. | ||
You know, at first when the ball takes off, it's pretty small. | ||
Hardly anybody sees it. | ||
You know, but then it starts picking up speed and starts rolling down that hill. | ||
And then it becomes so big and so fast, undeniably, everybody's going to have to be paying attention to it. | ||
And that's kind of where we're at. | ||
And this is all leading up into Revelation. | ||
I always call in and warn about this because, you know, we're right at that point where, you know, it's about to be this digital currency mark of the beast system with, you know, Israel that, you know, it is the head of the snake of this new world order. | ||
And all eyes are going to be on it soon because you're going to have two witnesses that start the first three and a half years of the tribulation. | ||
And you're going to have this Antichrist that's, you know, ushered into this temple. | ||
And you're going to have this red heifer for the sacrifice and, you know, the whole rest of it. | ||
So it's all very real. | ||
It's all happening right now. | ||
And that's why the Bible says we won't know those times or the exact day, but we'll know the season. | ||
And so here we are in this. | ||
So it's approaching. | ||
So people have to get ready and be prepared. | ||
Also, tomorrow is not promised, but this great tribulation that's coming should be signs that we need to prepare because, you know, ultimately, why should we not take the mark of the beast, right? | ||
Well, because it's going to send us to hell for eternity. | ||
And if you believe in your Bible, you'd understand that hell is very real and that tomorrow isn't promised, that we need to get saved today. | ||
But these signs that are going on right now are all signs that, you know, God sends us revelation and prophecy so that we'll believe that this, that he is the real God, that he is coming, his promises are coming. | ||
And Paul tells us during the church age that what we're supposed to put our hope in, and it's not in this world, it's not in man, but our blessed hope, which is the rapture. | ||
And he has a couple verses in the Bible that are actually there that people can read. | ||
I know a lot of people don't think there's a rapture in the Bible, but clearly there is. | ||
And 1 Thessalonians 4, 16 through 18 and 1 Corinthians 15, 52, or those who are dead in Christ shall rise first, and those who are alive and remain shall be caught up together in the clouds to meet the Lord in the earth. | ||
This moment will happen. | ||
He tells us exactly when it's going to take place. | ||
And that's when they shall say peace and safety, then sudden destruction shall come upon them as travail upon women with child. | ||
And they shall not escape. | ||
Peace and safety and national security have all been concepts that have been used to justify massive destruction and war. | ||
And then it's written right there in the text, isn't it? | ||
Right, it's right there. | ||
And I believe this is a pre-trip thing because it says sudden destruction. | ||
Now, if you study Revelation, it's a bunch of destruction that leads up into the end. | ||
There's seals, trumpets, and bowls at the very last part of the tribulation. | ||
That's all great destruction that all leads up. | ||
So it's not sudden. | ||
I believe this sudden destruction is going to be the beginning of the tribulation. | ||
When the fallen ones reveal themselves, they come to the earth and they say, peace and safety, right? | ||
This is going to be the moment of the great deception when the rapture takes place and those who are left behind to suffer great tribulation. | ||
They're going to suffer. | ||
And there's going to be a great deception, a great lie where people will think, you know, maybe we're at some different planet or something. | ||
They got to trust the fallen ones or whatever. | ||
And that's how they end up taking the mark of the beast. | ||
And just, you know, this transhumanist movement's going to be, you know, this is definitely the season. | ||
I totally agree with you. | ||
And Enter City. | ||
Thank you so much for calling. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Daryl in North Carolina. | ||
Daryl, North Carolina, what is on your mind? | ||
Well, the other caller, I just want to say that in the original Greek, apocalyptus, it means unveiling or lifting of the veil. | ||
So to me, that's what the apocalypse is. | ||
And we are seeing a lot of things being unveiled right now. | ||
Not the client. | ||
Not the Epstein list. | ||
No, that's true. | ||
Not the Epstein list. | ||
But, hey, I wanted to talk about the flooding that's going on, which is, to me, very unnatural, not just for you guys, but we're having it hitting this again here in Durham. | ||
And then there's, what, New Mexico, Chicago, a couple of the places that are having one in 1,000-year flooding currently at the same time. | ||
And I lean toward the weather weapons or Planet X and Nibiru happening. | ||
But my daughter, who's eight, she thinks it's dragons. | ||
Your eight-year-old daughter thinks it's dragons causing the floods? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And she's seen them, and she's not lying or pranking, but she wants to tell you the story about the three dragons she's seen over the past couple of days. | ||
Here she is. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
So the first one I saw was the day before 4th of July last week, and it was a yellow one. | ||
Me and my dad were having a fire outside in our backyard on a picnic, on the picnic table. | ||
And I was looking up at the sky. | ||
You know, like I was tired, and I was laying down on the bench, like on my back. | ||
And I was looking up at the sky, and I saw like a yellow one fly through the sky, like a light yellow, like, you know, like baby yellow, that colorish. | ||
It flew behind the trees or whatever. | ||
We live in an area near forest, so like you can't see a plane and bird, anything past the trees. | ||
And then like, it was clear that it was a dragon. | ||
That was the first dragon I saw. | ||
And it was like, I could tell it wasn't like a bird. | ||
unidentified
|
It was yellow, like not like a bird like being that color. | |
And it was like bigger than like a bird flying that high up, like bigger, way bigger. | ||
And the second dragon I saw was like a blackish, a black dragon that was like darker than the sky. | ||
It was on 4th of July last week, and I saw it because it was darker than the sky. | ||
And, like, I saw it for three seconds, basically, and then, like, just disappeared. | ||
And, like, it was, you know, big, like, not like birds flying that high up, like I said, with the yellow dragon, you know? | ||
And then the last one I saw was, like, a brown dragon that was, like, on a roof or whatever. | ||
And then, like, we passed a light tower or whatever, like a light post, and then it was just gone. | ||
And those are the three dragons that I saw. | ||
Wow. | ||
So how do you think they're connected to the floods? | ||
Like, I think they're connected to the floods. | ||
unidentified
|
And, like, you know, dragons might have, like, elemental powers. | |
Like, there's so many stories of, like, 100 years ago or something like that, of dragons, you know, coming down or something. | ||
unidentified
|
Like, coming down and using powers or whatever, and people just killed a bunch of them. | |
And, like, me and my dad think that, like, they just, like, froze in time and, like, the core of the earth, like, far down in the ground. | ||
And, like, I think they're connected to floods. | ||
Like, they have elemental powers or whatever. | ||
Like, one could be water. | ||
One could be fire. | ||
One could be electricity. | ||
One could be who knows what else. | ||
Nature. | ||
Well, I tell you what. | ||
This has been my all-time favorite call. | ||
Thank you so much for calling in and sharing that story. | ||
It reminds me of one of my favorite scenes from Lord of the Rings where Belbo screams, Nonsense! | ||
unidentified
|
There hasn't been a dragon in these parts for a thousand years! | |
The fireworks are going off. | ||
Especially since you mentioned it in context of the 4th of July, too. | ||
We're going to move on to other callers. | ||
Thank you so much for calling in and sharing that beautiful story and interesting food for thought. | ||
Valerie in Kentucky. | ||
Valerie, what's on your mind? | ||
unidentified
|
Hi, Jay. | |
Hi. | ||
How you doing? | ||
I'm great. | ||
I wanted to talk about why it's a huge mistake for Trump to compromise with evil. | ||
Because once you lay down with dogs, you get up with fleas. | ||
And you cannot trust evil people. | ||
I don't care what kind of deal you make, they are going to betray. | ||
And I love the show today. | ||
You're doing a great job for Harrison. | ||
And I listen every day and have been listening for six years. | ||
But we need revival. | ||
Holy Spirit's in control. | ||
And that's the only way we're going to fight against this evil is to go along with what the Holy Spirit is doing. | ||
And I still support Trump. | ||
But he needs to do the right thing. | ||
I even made an account on Truth Social last night, which I never wanted to do, to go on there and make a post saying, stop. | ||
You know, yes, we support you, but make the right decision. | ||
You can't compromise with evil. | ||
Right. | ||
Can't negotiate with terrorists. | ||
Can't compromise with evil. | ||
Absolutely not. | ||
They will always betray you. | ||
And you've got to side up with Holy Spirit and really pray for discernment. | ||
And you're not being judgmental to call out where evil is. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
We're fruit inspectors. | ||
Good trees produce good fruit. | ||
Bad trees produce bad fruit. | ||
And no accountability makes us lose trust. | ||
Amen. | ||
Amen. | ||
And I want to leave room for other callers, but the life force. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, my gosh. | ||
I got a bottle of it. | ||
I'm 61 years old. | ||
And within three days, without doing anything different, I started noticing that I felt better. | ||
My digestion felt better. | ||
My stomach seemed flatter. | ||
And I think those spike proteins are just wreaking havoc. | ||
And I didn't have any of the shots. | ||
I just got a mild version of COVID that I think has been wreaking havoc with my poor 61-year-old body. | ||
And so I really love the life force. | ||
And when it's back in stock, I'm going to order a lot more and some for my family. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
We've got a lot of units on the way that are coming in a couple of weeks. | ||
That's the challenge. | ||
All the products are so good. | ||
It's impossible to keep them in stock. | ||
Because people catch on to what's really going on. | ||
And life force is something that Rex Jones really informed me about, told me a lot about. | ||
And he said that he was really impressed with the formula. | ||
Just for so many different reasons. | ||
Valerie, thanks for your call. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Laura in Texas. | ||
Laura, what's on your mind? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, guys. | |
I have something that Data Republic posted this morning. | ||
Well, he reposted it. | ||
And it's something about the National Endowment for Democracy. | ||
Have you heard about it? | ||
Yeah. | ||
How the video. | ||
unidentified
|
And he put together like this thing. | |
I think I was going to do a comment about it. | ||
It seems like to me like the funding. | ||
Republican side, both sides. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Look, everyone's talking about Elon Musk making a third party. | ||
He's really making a second party. | ||
You know, because we're dealing with a unit party right now. | ||
And look, when I hear even expressions like National Endowment for Democracy, I literally want to vomit all over the desk. | ||
Because, first of all, I hate democracy. | ||
Second of all, the word democracy is never mentioned once in the United States Constitution for a reason. | ||
Third of all, democracy is historically the number one leading cause of tyranny. | ||
It's just a matter of time. | ||
And this National Endowment for Democracy, what does that even mean? | ||
Thank you for your call, Mountain Patriot, the Rockies. | ||
You are live on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
How you doing on this Black Pill Thursday, Chase? | |
I'm rocking. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm rocking. | |
Well, Matthew 1720, faith of a mustard seed. | ||
You can move a mountain. | ||
The Mountain Patriot. | ||
Well, I'm interested to hear more from this kid, Augustus. | ||
Me too. | ||
unidentified
|
Have you seen his mullet, by the way? | |
It's awesome. | ||
His mullet? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
He's got the most epic mullet I've ever seen. | ||
I was very impressed. | ||
It's almost Joe Dirt level good. | ||
It's better, though. | ||
It's pretty good. | ||
If only the kid could grow a mustache, you might be somebody. | ||
He'll get there. | ||
I mean, if you can figure out how to make it rain, you can figure out how to grow a mustache. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I'm still not sold on that mullet. | |
his technology isn't isn't uh creating havoc and yeah i'm gonna ask him all about that when he joins us in in in about 10 minutes or so. | ||
I have no doubt in my mind that the dude is totally honest, but I'm very skeptical of this type of technology, you know? | ||
Well, you know, maybe he doesn't, yeah, he seems like a great spokesperson, but maybe he doesn't know that much about science after all. | ||
I'm curious because he's saying they have all these new radar technologies now that they can do this and that with. | ||
You know, Earth and the atmosphere is a complex system. | ||
And how does he know that all of these new radar and everything, you know, quantum physics says that when you measure something, you're affecting the system. | ||
So how does he know that all of this radar and whatnot that they're using blasting into the ionosphere or whatever? | ||
How does he know that's not affecting things? | ||
Yeah, I'll ask him. | ||
I'll ask him. | ||
Does he even understand the basic tenets of science, which most people don't? | ||
I've asked PhDs and people with master's degrees. | ||
I asked a girl with master's degree, biology, that was working with anthrax, and she couldn't even give me a definition of what is science. | ||
Science. | ||
Science. | ||
It's Anthony Fauci. | ||
It's Fauci. | ||
Yeah, that's right. | ||
Well, you know what the hallmark of good science is? | ||
What? | ||
It's the prediction of outcomes. | ||
Oh, yeah, yeah. | ||
Scientific method. | ||
Hypothesis, test, predict. | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
But, however, it's also the hallmark of good journalism. | ||
And who is it that's always right? | ||
Alex Jones. | ||
News always predicts the outcomes. | ||
That's right. | ||
Yep, Alex Jones. | ||
I appreciate your time. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm all hopped up on Red Bull and Methylene Blue. | |
Oh, that's an awesome combination right there. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah. | ||
That's just pouring gasoline on a wildfire. | ||
You better be careful. | ||
You better be careful doing that. | ||
Gavin Newsome will probably arrest you. | ||
It's way too dangerous for the environment to have you running around in the mountains hopped up on methylene blue and Red Bull, dude. | ||
It's quite something. | ||
I'm a big fan. | ||
I have got. | ||
The reason I like the methylene blue is because you don't have to wait a couple of weeks for it to take effect. | ||
You literally take it, and then within 30 minutes, you can tell that it's having an impact. | ||
That's what's so cool about it. | ||
You know, if you've ever done any yoga or any like breath exercises and qigong or anything like that, it feels like how you feel after you supersaturate yourself with oxygen in those breathing exercises. | ||
I mean, it's almost identical. | ||
Do you practice qigong? | ||
I do. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I have for over 20 years. | |
Do you do sword fingers? | ||
I don't know that. | ||
No. | ||
Is that where you just ram your fingers into sand over and over again until they're tough as nails? | ||
That's like the first scene from the movie, The Master with Walking Phoenix and Philip Seymour Hoffman when he's on the beach in World War II. | ||
He's just smashing the sand with his fingers. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
No, I just wanted to, I got a friend that's a Qigong guy. | ||
And one time I was in an altered state of consciousness and my head slammed against the wall and I opened my eyes and he was standing across the room pointing his fingers at me. | ||
It was some weird Qigong stuff. | ||
And that was about all I needed of that. | ||
Thank you so much for your call, Mountain Patriot. | ||
I really do appreciate it. | ||
We're coming up on a break here in three minutes. | ||
Then I am going to be joined by our esteemed guest, Augustus DeRico. | ||
He's a teal fellow and the founder of Rainmaker, a cloud seeding geoengineering startup that aims to create water abundance in the United States and around the world. | ||
Obviously, there's been a lot of controversy recently, not just because of the floods, but about weather modification, what's safe, what isn't, what's the difference between cloud seeding and the chemtrails that we're all familiar with and the legislation that's being passed in these different states. | ||
And so we are going to be having a fascinating conversation, trying to get to the bottom of the nuance of what's going on here. | ||
I'm going to be asking tough questions, but no gotcha questions. | ||
And we're just going to have a good time and give you guys all of the context and information you need to decide for yourselves what you think about this situation. | ||
So I'm very much looking forward to Augustus DeRico on the other side of this break. | ||
In the meantime, please go to the alexjonesstore.com. | ||
It is impossible for humanity to find its way out of this maze it's gotten itself in with all the corruption and all the systems that we've built up that have just trapped us in a prison planet. | ||
And it seems like all of the pieces are set on the board for a total collapse of humanity, a total subjugation of humanity, a conglomeration of all political power internationally into one world government. | ||
Wouldn't be called that, but effectively that's what it would be. | ||
But there still is hope, and there still is faith the size of a mustard seed that can move this mountain. | ||
But the only way that we can manifest this hope into the desired outcome of saving humanity and establishing freedom and justice in a world where everybody can reach self-actualization by having the freedom to do what it takes without worry or fear that they'll be exploited or robbed or stolen from or subjugated by either governments or others is if the truth can be broadcast worldwide incessantly. | ||
And they've tried to bring us down. | ||
They have spent hundreds of millions of dollars to try to shut down this operation. | ||
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Stay with us from all on the other side. | ||
Residents of the Texas Hill Country, ravaged by that megastorm last week that's killed over 100 people still, hundreds missing, are outraged right now because the head of the Clinton Global Initiative, their world foundation of the Clinton crime family, Chelsea Clinton, has announced that members of their organization are on the ground. | ||
Now, there's a bunch of big issues here. | ||
Number one, it's on record in a major scandal that in multiple earthquake disasters in Haiti, the Clintons stole billions of dollars of the aid money. | ||
Almost no aid money that they raised went to the people of Haiti. | ||
It's a huge scandal. | ||
All came out. | ||
The Clintons kept over 95% of the money. | ||
But then it got worse. | ||
And they did this all to the world. | ||
They then had the head of the Clinton Foundation, their director, sub-director, got caught trying to illegally smuggle Haitians children out of the country and got convicted of human trafficking. | ||
Then she changed her name and became the head of Amber Alerts. | ||
You can't make this up. | ||
So anytime the Clinton Foundation is involved in a disaster, they're there to steal money. | ||
The corporate media runs ads for them everywhere. | ||
Just like the One Foundation with Bono gives around 1% of the money they raise, quote, for Africans. | ||
The rest of the money they literally use to overthrow African governments and fund communist groups like they did several times in Africa. | ||
You can look all this up. | ||
I mean, it is just wild. | ||
Just look up the One Foundation and Ethiopia funding a revolution. | ||
And again, that was tied to the Clinton Foundation and the UN. | ||
It's all the same group. | ||
So they will steal money they raise, and then they're always connected to human trafficking, and you got a bunch of missing kids. | ||
God knows what these people are doing. | ||
And again, the UN and a big AP investigation was found in Haiti to have worked with the Clinton Foundation to sexually abuse and also smuggle thousands of children out of the country. | ||
So you cannot make up the magnitude of how evil these people are. | ||
And you saw it through the Democrats the last four and a half years with Biden and the 350,000 kids they smuggled in that disappeared, many of them sex labor we now know, and physical slave labor. | ||
I mean, this is what they do. | ||
So we can speculate all day while Trump's covering up the Epstein file, and we're on it. | ||
But he has no history or connection to any of it. | ||
The Clintons and the Democrats do. | ||
And we know they're connected heavily to Epstein, Epstein, and the rest of it. | ||
That's what we need the information to come out. | ||
So this is massive. | ||
People are super pissed, very, very upset, and they should be. | ||
And the Clinton Foundation is so discredited. | ||
It shouldn't show its face anywhere, but it is. | ||
But because Bill Clinton's so discredited, and Hillary is, they use Chelsea Clinton or Webster Hubble's daughter reportedly to be the front person for this because a quote young woman is non-threatening. | ||
These people are beyond criminal. | ||
They're connected to all the globalist networks, Bill Gates, Epstein, all of it. | ||
And they just won't go away. | ||
They're like herpes. | ||
They just keep coming back, coming back, coming back. | ||
I know Nick Sordor is here in Central Texas. | ||
He's out there reporting. | ||
Came on special broadcast we did last night with Chase Kaiser. | ||
He's on the show today, I believe. | ||
We're going to be exposing it all on my broadcast, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. | ||
Central. | ||
Owen Schroyer as well, The War Room, 3 to 6 p.m. | ||
Chase is doing a new show weeknights. | ||
That is tomorrow's news tonight. | ||
So be sure to watch Real Octoes on X and Infowars.com forward slash show for all those feeds. | ||
But this is wild. | ||
We have known human trafficking kingpin organization also steals aid money now in, now in the hill country with their operatives. | ||
This is a red alert, folks. | ||
Look out. | ||
The fox is in the hen house. | ||
The wolf is coming after the sheep. | ||
These are criminals, known criminals. | ||
Look out. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, we've got Augustus DiRico in studio with us today. | ||
We're going to be breaking down all things, cloud seeding, floods, what the hell is going on on the other side of this very short one-minute break while we are joined by hundreds of radio stations nationwide. | ||
So please stay tuned. | ||
Augustus DiRico is a Teal Fellow and the founder of Rainmaker, a cloud seeding geoengineering startup that aims to create water abundance in the United States and around the world. | ||
Stay with us. | ||
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We'll be right back. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the Alexis Day Smith. | ||
We'll be back in studio next week on just borrowing the show for the week, keeping it live. | ||
We've got an incredible guest in studio for the next hour or so before the Alex Jones show begins. | ||
Augustus DiRico is a Teal Fellow and the founder of Rainmaker, a cloud seeding startup that aims to create water abundance in the United States and around the world. | ||
Augustus, thank you for being with me today. | ||
Thanks so much for having me. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
So let me just give you some context of where I'm at, and I think it'll be a good jumping off point. | ||
When it comes to weather modification, which I know isn't exactly the same thing as geoengineering, which I know isn't exactly the same thing as cloud seeding, there's nuance to all of this. | ||
I am somebody who is intuitively very opposed to it. | ||
Are you sure that's a good idea? | ||
That's where I'm at. | ||
Not an expert on this. | ||
Haven't read all the studies on it. | ||
I don't like it when Bill Gates goes into third world countries and totally messes them up with everything. | ||
And I don't like it when he talks about blocking out the sun with micro wooden fibers in the United Kingdom. | ||
Sounds like a bad idea to me. | ||
And I don't trust a lot of the people that are associated with this stuff. | ||
That being said, I Have no reason to believe that there's anything nefarious about you or the work that you're doing. | ||
I'm sure that much of it has been greatly misunderstood, but I just want to get to the bottom of what exactly it is that you do, how it works, how you think you know that it's safe at least, and what the difference is between what you're doing and what the psychopathic lunatics in the military industrial complex and the political industrial complex like Bill Gates are doing. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
So like you said, I run a cloud seeding company and cloud seeding is a way to mimic the natural precipitation process in nature and make clouds precipitate more than they otherwise would. | ||
It has nothing to do with dimming the sun. | ||
If you see these long streaks in the sky, right, be they contrails or chemtrails or something else, that's also not cloud seeding. | ||
Cloud seeding is something that American farmers and municipalities and utilities use to make more water when there are times of drought. | ||
And our operation in cloud seeding writ large had nothing to do with the floods that occurred in Texas. | ||
Did you seed the areas that were affected? | ||
So we have operations throughout Texas with municipalities and farmers. | ||
And in one of those areas, the South Texas Weather Modification Association, we were operating on the 2nd of July. | ||
And so cloud seeding, it takes effect after about an hour or two, right? | ||
You can induce precipitation 15 minutes and then those cloud seeds dissipate over the course of hours. | ||
We seeded those clouds and then suspended operations on the 2nd. | ||
We suspended operations because our meteorologists saw that there was an inflow of moisture from the Gulf that could pose flooding risk. | ||
Now, what's interesting about that. | ||
So no need to see it. | ||
It's going to rain. | ||
Precisely. | ||
Precisely. | ||
And what's interesting about that is, one, a lot of people have said like, well, you know, is there any oversight for this? | ||
Like, who's even allowed to modify the weather? | ||
That seems like something that should be regulated. | ||
And it is. | ||
So through the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, we have what are called suspension criteria, meaning if there's ever a flash flood warning posted by the National Weather Service or a severe thunderstorm warning, we're not allowed to seed that cloud or when there is a flash flood warning. | ||
And those flash flood warnings went out on the 3rd. | ||
So our meteorologists actually suspended operations out of an abundance of caution before even the National Weather Service would have required us to per Texas law. | ||
So hypothetically speaking, if you wanted to cause a massive flood in areas, does the technology exist to do that? | ||
A massive flood, no. | ||
The limits of the technology right now are thus. | ||
The very best cloud seeding operations that we've seen throughout either the academic community or our operations can produce tens of millions of gallons of precipitation, right? | ||
That's less than a centimeter worth of precipitation distributed over tens or hundreds of square miles. | ||
The remnants of Tropical Storm Berry that blew through, that dumped trillions of gallons of precipitation. | ||
So like a million times more than what the best in class cloud seeding can do. | ||
So can you cause something like a hurricane to blow in? | ||
No. | ||
Now that being said, it's worth saying, right? | ||
I'm trying to be continuously as transparent as possible for the sake of answering people's appropriate skepticism and concerns. | ||
So that said, it's worth bringing up something called Operation Popeye. | ||
Have you heard of that before? | ||
Yes. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So the United States before has engaged in cloud seeding to attempt to increase precipitation, to moisten the ground, to impede logistics for the Viet Cong. | ||
That's what we were doing during the Vietnam War. | ||
The reason why we have suspension criteria built into all of our permits and licenses in the United States is to do no harm. | ||
And so could this technology in the same way that nuclear be used either for energy, which is great, or for nuclear bombs? | ||
Totally. | ||
And I think that we need regulatory oversight and also like a prayerful, stewardly mindset when we're using it to ensure that it's being used to make more water for farms that are in drought, restore ecosystems like the Colorado River, ensure that cities like Phoenix never have to turn water off to their residencies, because that was happening just last year. | ||
Cloud seeding, if used and regulated appropriately, is something that I think can radically improve the quality of life for Americans across the West. | ||
What about the ripple effect or the butterfly effect? | ||
I don't even know where it comes from. | ||
There's an old concept of the butterfly effect where if a butterfly flaps its wings in one place, then a hurricane occurs on the other side of the planet. | ||
It's like an old story that people have told and discussed. | ||
What impact could cloud seeding have days or weeks later, perhaps, in a completely different area or region because of the increased precipitation in one region? | ||
Yeah, so I think that there's like a meta point to make here and then a more practical one about cloud seeding. | ||
So you notice how like in the in the story of the butterfly effect, it's because a butterfly flapped its wings that there were some bad out. | ||
Like when we build cities, we create heat islands and that changes convection around the cities. | ||
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Right. | |
So at what point do you manage everything that you do? | ||
So we as a country and a civilization and a species are unintentionally modifying the weather in all kinds of ways right now. | ||
And I would prefer to live in a world, again, with the appropriate oversight and mindset of stewardship, where we're intentionally modifying the weather for our benefit and for creation's benefit too. | ||
So that's the first point. | ||
Then the second point about whether cloud seeding specifically could cause some sort of adverse consequence days or months later, the material that we use in cloud seeding, silver iodide, right? | ||
Those particles, when you disperse them into a cloud, after precipitating, they're only in the atmosphere for a few hours. | ||
If you release them just into the open air, they would only be in the air for like 10, 20 hours. | ||
And even so, they would be so low in concentration that they'd be less concentrated than just the natural soil dust that's already kicked up into the atmosphere. | ||
And so not only did the cloud seeding operation that we conducted on the second dissipate all of the material out over the course of hours, but also it couldn't have had any impact on worsening the storm because those air soils wouldn't have stayed suspended. | ||
Yeah, I have no doubt in my mind that your cloud seeding operation here in Texas had nothing to do with the floods. | ||
What I'm generally more interested in is whether it's safe in a more general sense, whether it's a good idea in a more general sense, because of all these implications. | ||
But I want to kind of pivot and bounce back to it. | ||
Can you tell me a little bit about what your background is and what it means to be a teal fellow and how you got into class eating? | ||
It's not a very common thing for a young man these days to be involved in. | ||
Yeah, yeah, sure. | ||
So I was originally, I grew up in Connecticut. | ||
I went to study physics at UC Berkeley for my undergrad. | ||
I do have a weird haircut, but it's not dyed me. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
But I didn't diet blue at Berkeley, I think is one of the nice man. | ||
And then when the pandemic happened, I moved from Berkeley to Fort Worth, Texas. | ||
And that's where I dropped out of college and started my first company. | ||
My first company was a groundwater monitoring company. | ||
So we helped farmers measure how much water they were pumping out of the ground. | ||
And every single customer we had said, hey, it's great that I know how much water I'm using. | ||
I really would just prefer to have more water in the first place, though. | ||
And so I looked at the available technologies to produce more water, to prevent droughts in the United States. | ||
And desalination is obvious. | ||
This one comes up all the time. | ||
I thought about building a desal company. | ||
But the problem with desal is you can only do it on the coasts, right? | ||
You can only do it if there is a salty ocean to desalinate. | ||
And it costs billions of dollars just to build that infrastructure. | ||
And then if you want to pump that inland, like if you want to get that water to Austin, let alone Dallas or Salt Lake City or Denver, it's going to cost you tens or hundreds of billions of dollars in capex, years of construction, eminent domain for thousands of miles of land, and then OPEX maintenance on the order of billions of dollars as well. | ||
So although I do think that desalination is great and there's a lot of things that we should be doing to produce more water, it doesn't solve the fundamental problem of water scarcity in the interior of the U.S. And so is there actually a real water scarcity problem inside the U.S.? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So now that being said, it's worth saying, I don't think that we manage our water resources very well right now. | ||
I think that there's a lot of water that we let run off into the ocean. | ||
I think that we don't store as much of it as we should. | ||
I think that we could irrigate even more efficiently. | ||
But that said, the Ogallala Aquifer, right? | ||
That's, I think, the biggest aquifer in the United States. | ||
It stretches from the Dakotas all the way down to here in Texas. | ||
There are wells, groundwater wells, that have run dry in the last few years because of how much has been pumped out of it, right? | ||
Even though in the last two years, Lake Powell has been relatively full. | ||
In the decade before that, it was almost out. | ||
The supply is inconsistent and scarce, often scarce. | ||
Exactly. | ||
And I'm pro-growth, right? | ||
Like I want us to have a more abundant country with more Americans. | ||
And we, at least to meet current demands, and especially if we want to continue growing, need to produce more water. | ||
And so cloud seeding, I found out, is the most scalable, productive way to create water over your head, right? | ||
When there are clouds present that have liquid water in them, super cool liquid water specifically, you can induce precipitation in the watershed that you're interested in, be you in Colorado or Utah or California or Texas. | ||
Oh, and then so when I started Rainmaker, I got the Teal Fellowship. | ||
The Teal Fellowship is a fellowship and grant that's given by the Teal Foundation, founded by Peter Thiel, obviously. | ||
How much was it, if I may? | ||
It's $100,000. | ||
And it's given to college dropouts that have some sort of grand aspirational and perhaps like plausible vision for a company that they could build that would positively impact the world. | ||
And so I think a lot has been said about Peter Thiel in the last few years. | ||
I am grateful for the Thiel Fellowship. | ||
Have you met him? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, I have. | ||
Have you worked, just met him briefly, or have you actually, do you actually interact with him? | ||
I see him periodically, but not. | ||
I'm really curious to know. | ||
Obviously, you might be biased. | ||
I'm just curious to know what your sense of him is because I'm undecided. | ||
Well, what I'll say as an opener is that I don't think I'm the Antichrist, and I also think humanity should persist. | ||
I don't know if you saw that clip. | ||
Do you know that I'm referencing? | ||
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
I aired that clip. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
I can say that pretty confidently. | ||
I was just thinking about Jesus with a mullet when you were saying that. | ||
And so, you know, I think that he's obviously a brilliant guy, right? | ||
Like, you don't make a generational run on so many companies. | ||
You don't get so involved in politics without building something or without being extraordinarily capable. | ||
Yeah, he's obviously brilliant, and he's been very successful in his investments. | ||
One of the, I think, first outside investor in Facebook or one of the very early ones. | ||
And I've interviewed Blake Masters. | ||
I read Zero to One. | ||
And I know that he's done a lot of work within the Conservative Party. | ||
But I get concerned about things like balance here. | ||
But we can get to that. | ||
The reason I want to mention Peter Thiel mainly is just because you've got this brilliant investor, futurist even, you could say, strategic mind who's seeing potential in your work with cloud seeding. | ||
And I just remember the very end of the movie, The Big Short, where Michael Burry, who famously predicted everything that was going to happen with the housing class in 2008, says at the very end of the movie, he now invests mostly in water. | ||
So I'm thinking to myself, why is Michael Burry and Peter Thiel investing in water technology? | ||
What's really going on over the course of the next decades on a macro scale, international, as it pertains to strategic resources and water? | ||
There's this Mark Twain quote, right, which is that whiskey is for drinking and water's for fighting over. | ||
The history of the American West is one of water scarcity and either fighting over water resources or engineering solutions to produce more water, right? | ||
If you look at the Colorado River, if you look at the Central Valley of California, if you look at the Ogallala Aquifer here in Texas, or if you look around the world, right? | ||
There are huge water scarcity problems that are going to limit growth or cause instability. | ||
Like Ethiopia built a dam on the Nile River and Sudan and Egypt need the Nile to survive. | ||
And now Ethiopia has the ability to dictate how much water they're getting. | ||
And so if there isn't enough water to go around, it'll cause serious instability. | ||
And so cloud seeding, insofar as it can produce more water, I think is a reasonable thing to be interested in because it can help facilitate growth and prevent the instability that will come if people do start having to either legally or internationally physically fight for water availability. | ||
What does the United States look like in 25 years if we engage in no cloud seeding versus if we embrace it? | ||
The cities in the Western U.S. are going to be depopulated if we do not, one, use cloud seeding and a variety of other technologies. | ||
Completely depopulated or just drastic decrease? | ||
Drastically, right? | ||
Like Phoenix, Arizona, Las Vegas. | ||
Maybe you could say it would, well, I won't make that joke on air, but you can say it. | ||
Well, yeah, yeah, I know, I know. | ||
I just, I love the people of Las Vegas. | ||
I think the city's a little bit degenerate. | ||
That's what I say. | ||
They would say it too. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
But yeah, I mean, it looks like at the very least, no more growth, right? | ||
Like we cannot have people having families if we don't produce more water in these areas. | ||
All of the agriculture is going to collapse. | ||
One practical thing is people in Las Vegas aren't allowed to have lawns anymore just because of how little water there is. | ||
Yeah, when I lived in California, we couldn't water our lawn, or you had to do it on Monday, Wednesday, Friday instead of you or something like that. | ||
Which, and listen, I'm all for being a good steward and I'm all for using our resources efficiently, right? | ||
But it's ridiculous that we are being told to take shorter showers and that we're being told to use less and that we're being told that we can't water our lawns because we don't have enough resources, right? | ||
We should be adopting technologies and implementing policies that safely and responsibly produce a more abundant future for us. | ||
And that's exactly what cloud seeding can do. | ||
Cloud seeding can prevent this depopulation and degrowth scenario in the American West and the rest of the world. | ||
Is it powerful enough to generate a meaningful amount of water? | ||
So if you think about it, right, it's I mentioned before, 10 million gallons from a cloud seeding event is nowhere near a tropical storm. | ||
Now, that said, 10 million gallons are hundreds of acre feet, right? | ||
That can irrigate farms for months. | ||
Is it the only thing that we're going to need to do to produce enough water for America to continue to grow? | ||
No, but is it enough to radically change the water supply strategy in the Western U.S. and reverse, say, the aridification of either the Salton Sea or the Colorado River or the Great Salt Lake? | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
I'm curious to know what countries like Ukraine, which is considered the breadbasket of Europe, and China are doing in the way of using this technology because China's strategically interested in becoming independent of U.S. agriculture. | ||
Currently, it's fairly dependent, if not totally dependent on, especially soybeans, I believe. | ||
And if they're dependent on our food, then they can't really escalate conflicts with us and take Taiwan and things like that. | ||
So they're trying to figure out how to become independent of our agriculture so they can expand their interests overseas without concern of the blowback, basically. | ||
So what are other nations doing, like the Ukraine or China in the way of seeding? | ||
So I'll answer that. | ||
But even first, you raise an interesting point about American agricultural exports. | ||
It is of great benefit to the world that we so productively produce food, right? | ||
And it's also in our geopolitical interest to export food to these other countries so that we have good relations with them and so that they're dependent on us, right? | ||
A lot of people critique either alfalfa growing or pistachio or almond growing or soybean growing because they view it as like an American subsidy on Chinese food because we're giving away our water. | ||
We're selling the water to them essentially. | ||
I actually think that provided we can produce more water, which through cloud seeding we can, we should continue to make these crops and continue to produce the water for them such that places like China are dependent on our agricultural exports. | ||
Now, per your original question, what's China doing with respect to weather modification? | ||
Despite this being an American technology invented in the United States in the 40s, despite the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and NOAA formerly participating in weather modification programs to enhance water supplies, we haven't done much at all of it in the last few decades. | ||
The federal government spent $2.4 million on cloud seeding last year. | ||
That was it. | ||
And China, on the other hand, they just increased their budget for weather modification from $300 million a year last year to $1.4 billion a year this year. | ||
They are not only spending $1.4 billion a year on weather modification, they have over 35,000 employees in their weather modification department. | ||
They have two universities that offer accredited bachelor's degrees in weather engineering. | ||
They have retrofitted the equivalent of the MQ9 Reaper, which is like the military drone. | ||
Theirs is called the Winglong 2. | ||
They've retrofitted it for cloud seeding operations, and they're exporting that technology to places throughout Southeast Asia and also the Middle East. | ||
They're producing water for all of the rivers and farms in southern China, and they're actively greening the desert on the border of Mongolia via cloud seeding. | ||
So they're taking this technology extraordinarily seriously. | ||
They're already collaborating with other governments to export it. | ||
And I think that if the United States were to ban it wholesale, not only would we deprive farmers in the United States of having water, competitive disadvantage. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Wow. | ||
Well, it's just kind of like what's happening with the artificial intelligence race between China and the United States right now. | ||
If we don't develop the artificial intelligence technology, then China will. | ||
And we don't want China to be the only ones with the technology, despite the risks associated with AI. | ||
I'm concerned about the AI thing, too. | ||
It's not for here, I guess, because we're talking about the cloud seeding thing. | ||
But some of these studies or articles were put on the desk, and I haven't really had a chance to look at them because I've been on air this morning. | ||
But what do you think of potential risks of acute toxicity induced by AGL cloud seeding on soil and freshwater biota or hermesis induced by silver iodide, hydrocarbons, microplastics, pesticides, and pharmaceuticals? | ||
Obviously, there's more there than just cloud seeding. | ||
What about some of these studies that I'm just kind of looking at at a glance and concerns or criticisms with the cloud seeding technology? | ||
Yeah. | ||
So again, I think that it is totally understandable for people to be skeptical, to wonder whether this is a good idea, to wonder whether it's safe. | ||
And we use a material, like you said, silver iodide, in our cloud seeding operations. | ||
The way that it works is if you have liquid water in a cloud, cold water droplets that are too small to naturally precipitate, and you release silver iodide into it, silver iodide has a crystal structure similar to ice. | ||
So the water favorably freezes onto it, grows into big enough snowflakes such that they precipitate out. | ||
They melt back into rain too if it's warm beneath the cloud. | ||
Silver iodide is not something that you should eat hand over fist, right? | ||
Like you also shouldn't drink a whole bottle of methylene blue in one sitting. | ||
Actually, try it. | ||
Okay. | ||
But. | ||
Do you want to go to Mars? | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Let's get oxygenated, Bro. | ||
But that being said, silver iodide, we know from 80 years of data from cloud seeding operations that it has no adverse ecological, agricultural, or human health impacts because of the concentrations used. | ||
See, I believe that you're probably right, but here's where my context of Infowars troubles me. | ||
They said the same shit about fluoride, you know, in atrazine in the water. | ||
And I'm sure that the studies say that, but I don't trust any of these establishment studies or systems anymore. | ||
So on the other side of this break that we're coming up to in about a minute, because I want you to have plenty of time to respond, please expand on why you believe that the data and the studies are accurate, there's not a conflict of interest, and that these toxins, these chemicals, these substances are safe in the quantities that they're used for cloud seating, because I believe that you believe that. | ||
And you're probably right. | ||
I'm not an expert. | ||
I'm not well versed in this, but I know what it's like when the government says, hey, this medicine is totally safe. | ||
And all the blood products were contaminated in the 80s and they gave 10,000 hemophilia X, HIV and hepatitis, most of them dead now because of it. | ||
And I know what it's like when they say that the vaccines are safe and effective based on all the studies. | ||
And then you see everybody have a vaccine injury or myocarditis or AFib in their hearts and just sudden deaths all the time. | ||
So on the other side of this break, we'll get into it and we'll try to unpack it. | ||
So far, so good. | ||
I mean, I think you're answering all these questions wonderfully. | ||
And I'm not in a position or comfortable to come out just totally antagonistic, but I am really walking here cautiously because we're, for lack of a better term, no pun intended in dangerous waters. | ||
Folks, stay with us. | ||
More fascinating stuff on the other side of this break. | ||
Make sure you go to thealexjonesstore.com. | ||
It would be the reason that we can always be on the air. | ||
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Ladies and gentlemen, and I'm here with Augustus Drico. | |
Just explain to me how we got into business with Peter Thiel. | ||
And we are talking about the dangers of cloud seeding, whether or not they're actually real. | ||
Obviously, being concerned is totally legitimate. | ||
Can you respond to some of these studies or details and like kind of miscellaneous reports that I'm seeing that maybe silver iodide is toxic? | ||
You're saying that in the amount that it actually reaches the surface, all the studies show that it has no negative impact on the health of people or the environment. | ||
We've heard that before with other substances. | ||
Then 50 years later, it comes out actually a standard deviation of IQ, one or two standard deviations lower if you're drinking fluoride out of the water that we've been putting in. | ||
So how do you know this is safe, man? | ||
Yeah, totally worthwhile question, right? | ||
And it's a shame that people have lied to us and that bad data has come out for so long because it makes us way more skeptical by default of any information. | ||
Now that said, this particular study, this I see probably once a day on the internet, people bring it up all the time. | ||
Potential risk of acute toxicity induced by silver iodide clouds eating on soil and freshwater biota. | ||
So like with fluoride, right, people kind of just default said, it's safe, like don't worry about it. | ||
With silver iodide, we know that above certain concentrations, it is toxic either for the environment, be it for fish within it or for bacteria or just plants too, right? | ||
The threshold of toxicity, the lowest threshold listed in this study and in any other study. | ||
What is defined as toxicity? | ||
Where you start to get either adverse genetic consequences or reproductive behavior. | ||
The lowest threshold listed in this study or anywhere else that I've ever seen for toxicity from silver iodide, I'll get a little bit technical here if you'll indulge me, is a concentration of 0.43 micromoles of 0.43 micromolar. | ||
After 80 years of cloud seeding in the United States, because this has been going on for a really long time. | ||
And our testosterone levels have been plummeting and so have our fertility rates and our IQs. | ||
So I've got a funny thing on that in a sec. | ||
Okay. | ||
After decades of cloud seeding, we've only seen a concentration increase of 0.000034 micromoles of silver iodide in the soil and water. | ||
So that's 10,000 times less than the lowest toxological threshold for silver iodide. | ||
And it's worth saying there's already about two parts per million of silver in soil throughout the United States, right? | ||
It varies a little bit regionally. | ||
There's more silver in land, and I think 60% of all silver mined is in landfills. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
Exactly. | ||
And so there's already some silver in the soil, in the water. | ||
After this, after decades of cloud seeding, the concentration has only gone up eight parts per trillion, which is about a million times less than what's already in the soil. | ||
And the concentration after decades of operation of cloud seeding has only increased in certain regions by 10,000 times less than the toxic threshold. | ||
So we do know that there are safety parameters around cloud seeding and the concentrations of silver that are permissible. | ||
And that said, like, you know, it's kind of funny to say on InfoWars 2, I am an advocate for responsible regulation, right? | ||
Like, I don't think that this should be done in a totally libertine sense. | ||
I think that we'd have more competitors. | ||
We need to have more competitors, maybe. | ||
You would have more competitors. | ||
I would have more competitors if there was less regulation. | ||
Yeah, well, there isn't enough now, right? | ||
The federal government, so all the states have some sort of cloud seating regulation back from the 50s and 60s and 70s when cloud seeding was first around and invented and people got excited about it. | ||
The federal government only has something called the Weather Modification Reporting Act of 1972. | ||
And so the problem with that regulation, which was something that was popular and passed throughout the U.S. Congress, the problem with it is it only requires that you notify NOAA 10 days in advance of your cloud seeding operations and then report on what your effect is. | ||
But the reports are not sufficiently scrutinous, right? | ||
I think that either the Bureau of Reclamation in the Department of the Interior or some other entity should be permitting and regulating who can conduct cloud seeding and measuring what the consequences of it are, both for precipitation and silver iodide concentrations, so that we know that it's safe, so that people can transparently access that data. | ||
Oh, and the thing on, we can talk about that more, but the thing on testosterone levels going down, it's not nearly as effective as silver iodide, but pure testosterone actually is a pretty effective ice nucleating particle. | ||
And so you could theoretically release that into clouds. | ||
Oh my God. | ||
It's an option. | ||
If you blast testosterone into the clouds, I will just totally be your champion. | ||
I'll let you know if we decide that it would work well enough. | ||
I don't think that it will, but can you imagine how much Bill Gates' voice would change? | ||
All of ours, all of ours. | ||
But you know, it's interesting. | ||
I brought this up on the Sean Ryan podcast a while ago. | ||
We've seen in a variety of American municipal water filtration systems increases in the metabolites from birth control, right? | ||
Because we don't have filters in place right now to get rid of the birth control that is in the water supply because of how abundantly used birth control is. | ||
It's used, and then when women pee, it goes into the, and estrogen goes into the water supply plant. | ||
And exactly. | ||
And oftentimes that's recycled, right? | ||
And so I think that, one, we need cleaner and safer water. | ||
Like I'm totally in favor of things like regenerative agriculture and clean foods and clean water and clean air. | ||
And so that should be regulated 100%. | ||
But cloud seeding as it stands right now has no impediment to either human interest or the environments. | ||
Tell me a little bit about the difference in impact on the environment and health between something like crop dusting versus something like cloud seeding, because they seem like very similar things to me in terms of purpose, right? | ||
A farmer crop dusts so that there's not parasites that ruin insects that wreck his crop. | ||
And a farmer might want to cloud seed to ensure that his crop has enough water to grow, right? | ||
Historically speaking, as I understand it, there have been some issues with some of the chemicals that have been used for crop dusting. | ||
How much more dangerous is crop dusting than cloud seeding? | ||
So I have a lot of sympathy for farmers and I'm super grateful for the American farmers. | ||
I grew up in McLean County, Illinois, produces more corn than any other county in the world. | ||
So they're on farms too. | ||
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Totally. | |
So like, do I understand why they use things like glyphosate for making their farms more productive? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Do we know that glyphosate is not something that we should be eating hand over fist as well? | ||
Yeah, that is true. | ||
The concentrations of glyphosate and other pesticides that we disperse over our farms are millions of times higher than anything that comes from clouds eating. | ||
So like if you're concerned about cloud seating, I totally get it, but there are so many toxins that exist on our food, in our food, in our water that are millions of times higher in concentration and toxicity than silver iodide. | ||
What about the just general precedent of modifying or manipulating the weather at all? | ||
So let me give you some context of where my head's at. | ||
For 50, 60, or 70 years, we've had environmentalists, leftists talking about how man-made climate change is an incredible risk and danger to the planet. | ||
At first, it was because, hey, we have to have a healthy planet if we're going to live on it. | ||
Now they're like, hey, we have to kill everybody to have a healthy planet. | ||
So it's morphed into this disgusting thing. | ||
But for years, there's been this push that man is harming the environment and that's a major problem. | ||
Now I'm seeing this inversion from the left where the Bill Gates is and others are like, hey, we should be manipulating the environment by blocking out the sun to prevent or reduce global warming. | ||
And I'm thinking to myself, well, you guys have spent 50 years saying that man-made climate change is leading to the destruction of the planet. | ||
Now you're advocating for man-made climate change to save the planet. | ||
What do you think, assuming that cloud seeding is totally safe and it's effective, what do you think about the precedent that it sets for humanity to just get involved in more serious weather or environmental modifications? | ||
So right now, I guess the first thing that I'll say is like water is not a partisan issue, right? | ||
Like if you want access, it shouldn't be, right? | ||
Like if you want either farms to be more productive and to keep growing, or if you want our ecosystems to be conserved, then more water is a precursor to that, right? | ||
So like I don't think that this should be a Republican or Democrat issue, even though it has to do with the weather and ecosystems. | ||
My interest is just in a more abundant future. | ||
Like I want to produce more water for everybody and I'm interested in working with all kinds of people to facilitate that. | ||
Now, with respect to geoengineering and stratospheric aerosol injection, right? | ||
This is another real technology that has been proposed to dim the sun, right? | ||
To cool global temperatures. | ||
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We don't know who struck first, but we know it was us who scorched the sky. | |
The Matrix more. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's deep cut also. | ||
So like cloud seeding, it has 80 years of precedent. | ||
We know that it produces water on a localized scale. | ||
And also you can turn it off whenever you want, right? | ||
Like if for some reason you don't want cloud seeding anymore, then you can stop operating and there will be no long-term consequences from it. | ||
It won't change precipitation patterns in any manner. | ||
Stratospheric aerosol injection, on the other hand, like as a technologist, I find it fascinating, but it's something that hasn't ever been tested at scale. | ||
It's something that our global climate models are not very good at predicting the outcomes from and should be treated totally differently and viewed with a lot of scrutiny as well. | ||
I think that the regulations that pertain to cloud seeding and stratospheric aerosol injection or solar radiation modification should be the same? | ||
No, definitely not. | ||
Like this other one will have global and climatic implications for years. | ||
Those aerosols stay suspended in the stratosphere for years after emission. | ||
So that should be treated with way more caution, I think, than just cloud seeding itself. | ||
What about the inverse of cloud seeding? | ||
Does the technology exist where you can go in and prevent precipitation from taking place? | ||
So right now, the state of the science is out on that, right? | ||
Like though we know that we can enhance precipitation to some extent, I'm not yet convinced that you can do precipitation suppression. | ||
However, there have been a ton of attempts at that in the past. | ||
And so one example of this is like Project Storm Fury, where the U.S. Weather Bureau, the precursor to NOAA and the Air Force, were flying out into the Pacific or into the Atlantic, excuse me, seeding hurricanes to try to precipitate water out of them and then reduce the velocities of the wind before they broke against the eastern seaboard and cause damage. | ||
Indonesia and Thailand and China, they all have nascent precipitation suppression programs. | ||
How well they're working I think is still outstanding. | ||
But my mindset when it comes to this is the... | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
Discovered, made public, commercialized and operationalized. | ||
There will be some Delta for sure. | ||
But here's my mindset on this, right? | ||
I am grateful to have been saved when I was 20 years old. | ||
I got baptized two days before my 21st birthday. | ||
Then I got trashed. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
I think I went to Vegas like a month before that. | ||
You got baptized? | ||
Oh, you went to Vegas before you got baptized. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Good move. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I'm going to get it out of my system. | ||
I'm going to seed this cloud. | ||
I'm going to seed this whole town. | ||
Pause. | ||
And seed is strong. | ||
The testosterone seeding. | ||
The mindset that I have on all this is one of stewardship, right? | ||
Like if there are technologies that can better steward the world that God gave us, right? | ||
If we can both take care of ourselves and nature better in a way that honors God by making it more lush and abundant and beautiful, then I think we would be abdicating our responsibility both to ourselves and to God to take care of the creation that he gave us. | ||
And so with respect to precipitation enhancement, that is pretty straightforward, right? | ||
But then also, like if the atmosphere is a physical and chemical system, right? | ||
A complicated one, but fundamentally just physics and chemistry, then that means that it is possible that you could engineer the atmosphere so as to reduce the probability or severity of severe weather or flooding precipitation. | ||
That's what alarms me. | ||
Because yeah, it's got great applications, but what if we just want one of our enemies to have no water for six years? | ||
Which is what, so this is a great point. | ||
There's something called NMOD, the Environmental Modification Treaty. | ||
Because we love treaties. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, they're pretty hard to enforce, right? | ||
But that theoretically banned the weaponization of weather modification back in the 70s. | ||
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Yeah. | |
Yeah. | ||
And so like, should anybody be doing this? | ||
No. | ||
Should we be able to track who is doing it and what the effects are? | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
Tell me about terraforming Mars. | ||
So first and foremost, like I think space is awesome. | ||
It's great. | ||
I am super excited. | ||
You're Earth round? | ||
Yeah, I'm a moon landing guy. | ||
We did land on the moon. | ||
I'm pretty sure that we did land on the moon. | ||
Do you think we landed on the moon and the footage is real, or do you think we landed on the moon, but the footage was faked? | ||
That's a good question. | ||
I think the footage being real is I've seen some interesting evidence. | ||
I still think that's real. | ||
I think that that did happen. | ||
The best reason to believe that the moon landing really happened is that the Soviets immediately congratulated us. | ||
Well, nobody called us on it. | ||
But the thing is, there's this other theory that this was all fake and it was just an attempt to get the Soviets to invest a ton of money on space stuff so that it would bankrupt them. | ||
Yeah, but they didn't go bankrupt for like 20 or 30 years after that. | ||
Yeah, but they were still, yeah, maybe. | ||
Right. | ||
So again, I think the better evidence of the moon landing being real is that there's a reflector on it and you can like point a light or a laser and have that be reflected back. | ||
How did we get through the Van Allen belt? | ||
How did we get to the Van Allen belt? | ||
Through it, right? | ||
Isn't the name of it? | ||
The radiation belt? | ||
In the atmosphere? | ||
No, I'm not familiar with the Van Allen. | ||
Is that what it's called? | ||
Maybe I'm calling it the wrong thing. | ||
Isn't there a there's a there's a like a belt of massive radiation between the Earth and the and the moon? | ||
The Van Allen radiation belt, right? | ||
We went around it? | ||
Okay. | ||
Interesting. | ||
Interesting. | ||
It's kind of like how there's like a like a different distribution of ozone in the atmosphere, like the ozone whole stuff. | ||
No, that's. | ||
So there's man-made objects on the surface of the moon that you can test for from the surface of the Earth. | ||
Totally, totally. | ||
So not to catch any flack over whether the moon landing was real or not. | ||
I think it was. | ||
But like, I think space is awesome. | ||
I look forward to a multi-planetary future for humanity. | ||
I don't think that God made all of the universe for us just to stay on Earth, even though this has been a spectacular gift and starter planet for us. | ||
Now that said, like, I'm primarily focused on Earth. | ||
We all live here. | ||
We should make it more abundant here. | ||
But in the not too distant future, like maybe our children or our grandchildren, they will go to other planets. | ||
And that is incredibly inspiring. | ||
And I'm super grateful to Elon for building SpaceX and increasing the probability that we make it off Earth. | ||
And someday, we shouldn't just live in like pods and eat bugs on Mars, right? | ||
I want Mars and Venus and other planets throughout the solar system and beyond to resemble Earth because I think that in a certain sense, Earth resembles Eden, right, before the fall. | ||
And so if you were to melt the ice caps on Mars, which you could do either through detonating lots of nuclear bombs above the poles or by sending a bunch of CO2 from Venus. | ||
We could do that here if we wanted more water. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
We could do that too. | ||
We could irradiate the entire planet by blowing up a bunch of nukes over the poles. | ||
That's an option. | ||
I'm a technologist, right? | ||
I think about these things. | ||
I wouldn't put it past them. | ||
So we could melt the ice caps on Mars and then make the water liquid. | ||
Make the water liquid, create an atmosphere. | ||
And then once you've done that, like I think that we should get really good at modifying the atmosphere for our benefit on Earth so that we know how to do it and accelerate the terraformation of other planets once we get there. | ||
So do you think Elon's crazy with this Mars thing or do you think he's is there really an angle? | ||
Is it going to happen? | ||
You know, there's what did he say something like, you know, it does like, I guess he said something to the effect of like, never tell me the odds. | ||
It actually doesn't matter whether it's probable or not. | ||
The question is whether like it's our obligation and our duty to do that. | ||
And I think that for the sake of all mankind, like we have to pursue going to other planets for the sake of exploration, like the human spirit. | ||
There's the Jones clip of like, you know, the one that always gets referenced where he's just like going into space, quantum mechanics. | ||
Mathematics, quantum mechanics, secrets of the universe. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Life is fiery with its beauty. | ||
Yeah, that's the Magellan rant. | ||
Find it on YouTube, please. | ||
I think it's three minutes and 13 seconds long. | ||
I want to run it at the end of the show. | ||
Yeah, no, that is exactly the spirit that I'm taking with respect to weather modification. | ||
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And I think that, like, I mean, kids, Magellan is a lot cooler than Justin Bieber. | |
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
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And no, but we're our friends now. | |
But we, yeah, like, I'm stoked about getting to Mars. | ||
And I think that I think it's 2027 when the first Starship missions are scheduled to go there. | ||
Do you think that, what do you think the immigration policy should be when we establish civilization on Mars? | ||
You guys get this side of the planet. | ||
Yeah, well, I think that what's going to happen that nobody talks about is just like, well, if Elon's the only guy that can get people there, he's going to be the one that chooses who goes there. | ||
That's hysterical. | ||
Yeah. | ||
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Yeah. | |
Like he's going to be king of a planet. | ||
Like a lot of people have said early on in SpaceX, like, well, what's the point? | ||
Government should fund space travel because there's no economics there. | ||
Like, imagine if somebody was just emperor of Earth. | ||
Like, that's basically, he's basically just going to be emperor of Mars. | ||
Is space-based solar power possible? | ||
So there's two different options for it. | ||
Yes, it is possible. | ||
So one option, I'm actually friends with the guys from a company called Reflect Orbital. | ||
That's where you put mirrors around the Earth and then you reflect light from those mirrors down onto solar panels that we already have here. | ||
And that's interesting because solar, the big problem with it is that it doesn't work at night. | ||
But if we have a sufficiently large constellation of mirrors in space, we could reflect light back. | ||
Like a golden dome? | ||
It's sort of like a golden dome. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
But I don't think for the same, I mean, for different things, right? | ||
But light at night is possible with mirrors in space that could generate power on the other side of the planet when it is dark. | ||
Yeah, the reflect orbital guys are awesome. | ||
Another option is you have solar panels in space and then you beam the energy down. | ||
Yeah, radio frequency. | ||
Yep. | ||
Also seems very plausible. | ||
Yeah, I just don't know how feasible it is yet, but I'm curious as to whether or not the golden dome that Trump has been talking about is not just a national defense strategy for surveillance and missile defense. | ||
I'm curious whether it's got another motive for space-based solar energy. | ||
Elon Musk has come out very adamantly against the notion of space-based solar power because he's looked at the numbers and says it just doesn't make sense with the technology that we have the efficiency of isn't quite there. | ||
And he advocates for solar panels on the surface of the planet a number of times saying that we could power all of Texas and things of that nature. | ||
So I'm just curious as to whether or not this golden dome, infinite energy from space, could be a way that we can get out of the petrodollar by licensing it to other. | ||
Well, dude, I mean, and listen, I actually think that solar is like a really useful technology. | ||
Like I think it produces some of the cheapest energy. | ||
And we did have to subsidize the industry a lot initially to get us there. | ||
But I actually think solar is great. | ||
That being said, long term, like it's going to be nuclear. | ||
And that's kind of even talking against my own book because a lot of people want to talk about clean hydropower. | ||
And in the short term, we can make more energy via cloud seeding by filling up hydroelectric dams with more water. | ||
But I think that long term, if you look at energy density, fission, right? | ||
Nuclear energy, something that we needlessly regulated out of existence in the 70s, kind of like what some people have proposed we do to cloud seeding now, fission in the atomic age would bring about an era of abundance that I don't even think that we imagine or have the ability to imagine right now. | ||
And so maybe right now it's going to be solar and hydro that give us clean baseload power. | ||
But in the medium term, I think that fission is going to be huge. | ||
And then also like fusion, that's probably like a decade plus away. | ||
It kind of always is a decade plus away. | ||
It might be too hard. | ||
But like nuclear power in one form or another is the highest energy density that you can get. | ||
And I think that, you know, my buddy Isaiah Taylor, he founded a company called Valor Atomics, patriot, Christian, great guy. | ||
He's building a spectacular and really, really capable nuclear energy company to bring about more clean power than anybody else ever has. | ||
Is he pursuing any of the contracts associated with some of the AI data centers that are being proposed? | ||
He might be because I know that the part of the executive order that Trump signed was approving nuclear power facilities off-grid dedicated to these facilities because obviously the computing power demands a tremendous amount of energy for artificial intelligence in the way that our government wants to develop it. | ||
Yeah, yeah, no, it totally doesn't. | ||
So we should have nuclear for that. | ||
It's also we're saying like, you know, we've talked about how cloud seeding can benefit farms, ecosystem conservation, obviously like providing water to cities just for people to shower or irrigate their lawns. | ||
If we want to reindustrialize the United States, right? | ||
If we want to onshore chip manufacturing, if we want to build large data centers, if we want to bring back steel production, these are all like water-intensive businesses. | ||
Like you need water as one of the fundamental precursors for most any sort of industrial production. | ||
Cloud seeding also dovetails with that interest in reindustrialization too. | ||
Well, this has been a fascinating conversation. | ||
I could talk to you for hours, Augustus. | ||
Hopefully we can stay in touch and continue this conversation, have you on again. | ||
Augustus Dorico is a Teal Fellow and the founder of Rainmaker, a cloud seeding startup that aims to create water abundance in the United States and around the world. | ||
I've learned so much during this conversation. | ||
I have a great appreciation for you and what you're doing. | ||
You can learn more about him and his business at rainmaker.com, as well as follow him at ADARICO. | ||
That's A-D-O-R-I-C-K-O on X. And leave any of your questions or thoughts on this conversation below, and we'll do our best to try to get back to you. | ||
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